Ambilevous - What does it mean?
ambilevous | |
(rare) Having equally bad ability in both hands; clumsy; butterfingered.
* 1646': Sir Thomas Browne and Nath Ekins, ''Pseudodoxia Epidemica'' (' 1658 republication),
* 1953 : The Pediatric Clinics of North America ,
* 1960 : Harry Bakwin and Ruth Mae Morris Bakwin, Clinical Management of Behavior Disorders in Children ,
* 1998 : Yoav Ariel, Shlomo Biderman, and Ornan Rotem, Relativism and Beyond ,
ambilevous
English
Alternative forms
* The Oxford English Dictionary , second edition (1989) lists the ligated spelling () listed as secondary. (very rare) * ambilaevousAdjective
(en adjective)page 164
- Again, Some are as Galen hath expre??ed : that is, Ambilevous or left-handed on both ?ides; ?uch as with agility and vigour have not the u?e of either : who are not gymna?tically compo?ed : nor actively u?e tho?e parts. Now in the?e there is no right hand : of this con?titution are many women, and ?ome men, who though they accu?tome them?elves unto either hand, do dexterou?ly make u?e of neither.
page 607(W.B. Saunders Co.)
- Whereas the ambidextrous person is regarded as one who is capable of using both hands with equal dexterity, there are others, referred to as ambilevous , who use both hands equally awkwardly.
page 330(Saunders)
- The ambilevous (the opposite of ambidextrous) child is unable to use either hand more skillfully than the other, but is equally awkward in the use of each.
page 262] ([http://www.brill.nl/ BRILL; ISBN 9004109307)
- I as a right-handed person do not have the option of becoming genuinely ambidextrous, literally one with ‘two right hands’. And I surely must guard against sinking into one is who is doubly left-handed, or ambilevous . (We may notice the prejudice uncovered by etymology.) But I can, by will and practice, lessen the native inferiority of my weaker side.