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16 Sentences With "nimblest"

How to use nimblest in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "nimblest" and check conjugation/comparative form for "nimblest". Mastering all the usages of "nimblest" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Fashion reporters descended in a pack and the nimblest slapped her with a digital two-minute interview contract.
True, he was never the nimblest newt in the swamp and had all that racial muck in his past.
Each year, Westminster welcomes the smartest, fastest and nimblest pups to take the field to show off their skills with their handlers.
You are the fastest, nimblest – it may have something to do with your size – person I have ever met in my life.
With seamless high-speed clicking and effortless gliding, this is one of the nimblest gaming mice you can get at this price.
Rajesh, my father's third-born brother, had once been the most promising of the Mukherjee boys—the nimblest, the most charismatic, the most admired.
We've all lived through enough retrograde periods to know that much — but only the nimblest among us have learned how to dodge Mercury's swerviest curveballs.
At first glance, each work in a series of color-filled and linearly-appealing artworks seem worked over by the nimblest brushstrokes, producing gauzy dashes that collapse into neat alignment.
In a review of the show, John Russell of The Times called Mr. Fahy "one of our nimblest needlemen" for ably threading the works of Leonardo, Raphael, Titian, Andrea del Saito, Francesco Primaticcio and Jacopo da Pontormo into a cohesive narrative.
The comparative advantage of large carriers is at massive scale, where they are often better positioned than even their nimblest of foes at being able to support a vast customer base that expects someone to answer the phone when they have trouble.
BRUNI: I'm glad you mentioned Nick Hornby because I think he's emerged as one of the nimblest, most assured screenwriters working today and because "Brooklyn," interestingly, marks the third time in a short span that he's been the deft teller of a woman-centric story.
There is no doubt in his mind that he will win the Drones Club darts competition in Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit. Claiming that he can "out-Fred the nimblest Astaire" Bertie enjoys dancing and likes fancy dress balls.Wodehouse (2008) [1947], Joy in the Morning, chapter 5, p. 46. Bertie states that "as a dancer I out-Fred the nimblest Astaire, and fancy dress binges have always been my dish".
The WAAC were first trained in three major specialties. The brightest and nimblest were trained as switchboard operators. Next came the mechanics, who had to have a high degree of mechanical aptitude and problem solving ability. The bakers were usually the lowest scoring recruits and were stereotyped as being the least intelligent and able by their fellow WAACs.
NPR's Stephen Thomson said the album contains "some of Ritter's slipperiest, nimblest wordplay"Stephen Thomson, "Review: Josh Ritter, 'Sermon On The Rocks'", NPR, October 7, 2015. and Jonathan Bernstein of Rolling Stone commented that the record used "Eighties textures" and "vivid character sketches" to yield a very different result from its predecessor, The Beast in Its Tracks.Jonathan Bernstein, "Sermon on the Rocks" (review), Rolling Stone, October 29, 2015.
After the 1935 season, Clark was again selected as the first-team All Pro quarterback; the United Press also selected him as the best player in the NFL, calling him the "keenest football strategist", the "most dangerous one-man threat", "a fine drop-kicker and a deadly tackler." The Los Angeles Times noted that Clark "has been acclaimed as the greatest back in the history of the game." Another writer said he had "the nimblest legs in football" and called him the modern back who comes "nearest to perfection"." Red Grange called Clark "the hardest man in football to tackle" and noted: "His change of pace fools the best tacklers.
It can be read as one of Stevens's poems about the transfiguring power of poetic imagination, which in this case need not accept the night of the dolorous criers, but instead find in it qualities, like a sheaf of brilliant arrows or the nimblest motions, that make it the delight of the secretive hunter. Buttel finds this poem noteworthy for its connections to Whitman. Like Whitman, Stevens prized the lyrical qualities of American place names and animal names, and the title of this poem is one of Buttel's examples.Buttel references Whitman's "Starting from Paumanok" to document this shared affinity: > The red aborigines, Leaving natural breaths, sounds of rain and winds, calls > as of birds and animals in the woods, syllabled to us for names, Okonee, > Koosa, Ottawa, Monongahela, Sauk, Natchez, Chattahoochee.... He reads "Stars at Tallapoosa" as partly a refutation of Whitman's "Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking" yet at the same time a variation on the mood and theme of that poem, even displaying some of Whitman's tone and manner, as in the lines about wading the sea-lines and mounting the earth-lines.

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