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Feat   /fit/   Listen
noun
Feat  n.  
1.
An act; a deed; an exploit. "The warlike feats I have done."
2.
A striking act of strength, skill, or cunning; a trick; as, feats of horsemanship, or of dexterity.



verb
Feat  v. t.  To form; to fashion. (Obs.) "To the more mature, A glass that feated them."



adjective
Feat  adj.  (compar. feater; superl. featest)  Dexterous in movements or service; skillful; neat; nice; pretty. (Archaic) "Never master had a page... so feat." "And look how well my garments sit upon me Much feater than before."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Feat" Quotes from Famous Books



... Gauge of Southern Railroads in 1886—By C.H. HUDSON.—The conclusion of the account of this great engineering feat, with tables of statistics and ...
— Scientific American Supplement, No. 623, December 10, 1887 • Various

... the eager faces bending forward on all sides, and everywhere a growing admiration. A tribe of prowess themselves, the Nakonikirhirinons knew a clever feat when ...
— The Maid of the Whispering Hills • Vingie E. Roe

... and that these phantasies come to expression not only in dreams but also in hysterical phobias and in other symptoms. If the dream continues and settles activities of the day and even brings to light valuable inspirations, we have only to subtract from it the dream disguise as a feat of dream-work and a mark of assistance from obscure forces in the depth of the mind (cf. the devil in Tartini's sonata dream). The intellectual task as such must be attributed to the same psychic forces which ...
— Dream Psychology - Psychoanalysis for Beginners • Sigmund Freud

... painstaking, but they would often show more signs of genius if they had taken less. "You have taken too much trouble with your opera," said Handel to Gluck. It is not likely that the "Hailstone Chorus" or Mrs. Quickly cost their creators much pains, indeed, we commonly feel the ease with which a difficult feat has been performed to be a more distinctive mark of genius than the fact that the performer took great pains before he could achieve it. Pains can serve genius, or even mar it, but they ...
— The Note-Books of Samuel Butler • Samuel Butler

... who would grow up into a thinking man. He was with his mother. He was in civilian clothes, but in his lapel he wore the broad ribbon—black with two white bars—of the Iron Cross. Somewhere, sometime in these recent months, this quiet lad had performed coolly some feat of great personal valor. The look of unsuppressible pride upon his mother's face, as she walked on his arm, ...
— The Note-Book of an Attache - Seven Months in the War Zone • Eric Fisher Wood


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