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Sleight   /slaɪt/   Listen
noun
Sleight  n.  
1.
Cunning; craft; artful practice. (Obs.) "His sleight and his covin."
2.
An artful trick; sly artifice; a feat so dexterous that the manner of performance escapes observation. "The world hath many subtle sleights."
3.
Dexterous practice; dexterity; skill. "The juggler's sleight."
Sleight of hand, legerdemain; prestidigitation.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Sleight" Quotes from Famous Books



... rather than display. In short, let us subordinate mere knowledge to the work of invigorating the will, energizing productive effort and clarifying moral vision. Let us make safe men rather than vociferous mountebanks; let us put deftness in daily labor above sleight-of-hand tricks, and common sense, well trained, above classical smatterings, which awe the ...
— The Negro Problem • Booker T. Washington, et al.

... lying he cast her into a "Druidic sleep," in which she revealed her wickedness.[1117] In other cases spells are cast upon persons so that they are hallucinated, or are rendered motionless, or, "by the sleight of hand of soothsayers," maidens lose their chastity without knowing it.[1118] These point to knowledge of hypnotic methods of suggestion. Or, again, a spectral army is opposed to an enemy's force to whom it is an hallucinatory ...
— The Religion of the Ancient Celts • J. A. MacCulloch

... may own up to it, an' there's no use beatin' about the bush. The guilty party wot stole the locket an' transferred it by sleight-of-'and to poor Sue is no less a person than ...
— Sue, A Little Heroine • L. T. Meade

... and rhymes which have reappeared of late in English and American literature, Emerson would as soon have tried to ride three horses at once in a circus as to shut himself up in triolets, or attempt any cat's-cradle tricks of rhyming sleight of hand. ...
— Ralph Waldo Emerson • Oliver Wendell Holmes

... to thee, but tell me who thou art and who brought thee into this my apartment." Answered he, "O Princess, I am known as Ni'amah bin al-Rabi'a of Cufa and I have ventured my life for the sake of my slave-girl, Naomi, whom Al-Hajjaj took by sleight and sent hither." Said she, "Fear not: no harm shall befall thee;" then, calling her maid, she said to her, "Go to Naomi's chamber and send her to me." Meanwhile the old woman went to Naomi's bedroom and said to her, "Hath thy lord come to thee?" "No, by Allah!" answered ...
— The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night, Volume 4 • Richard F. Burton


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