Word Meanings - PRESTIDIGITATION - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Legerdemain; sleight of hand; juggling.
Related words: (words related to PRESTIDIGITATION)
- SLEIGHTLY
Cunningly. Huloet. - SLEIGHT
1. Cunning; craft; artful practice. "His sleight and his covin." Chaucer. 2. An artful trick; sly artifice; a feat so dexterous that the manner of performance escapes observation. The world hath many subtle sleights. Latimer. 3. Dexterous - SLEIGHTY
Cunning; sly. Huloet. - JUGGLERESS
1. A female juggler. T. Warton. - JUGGLE
Etym: 1. To play tricks by sleight of hand; to cause amusement and sport by tricks of skill; to conjure. 2. To practice artifice or imposture. Be these juggling fiends no more believed. Shak. - LEGERDEMAINIST
One who practices sleight of hand; a prestidigitator. - SLEIGHTFUL
Cunning; dexterous. - LEGERDEMAIN
Sleight of hand; a trick of sleight of hand; hence, any artful deception or trick. He of legierdemayne the mysteries did know. Spenser. The tricks and legerdemain by which men impose upon their own souls. South. - JUGGLING
Cheating; tricky. -- Jug"gling*ly, adv. - JUGGLER
jongleor, F. jongleur, fr. L. joculator a jester, joker, fr. joculus a little jest or joke, dim. of jocus jest, joke. See Joke, and cf. 1. One who practices or exhibits tricks by sleight of hand; one skilled in legerdemain; a conjurer. As nimble - JUGGLERY
1. The art or act of a juggler; sleight of hand. 2. Trickery; imposture; as, political jugglery. - OUTJUGGLE
To surpass in juggling.