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adept - Wiktionary, the free dictionary From French adepte, from Latin adeptus (“who has achieved”), the past participle of adipisci (“to attain”) adept (comparative more adept or adepter, superlative most adept or adeptest)
adept - WordReference. com Dictionary of English adept adj əˈdɛpt very proficient in something requiring skill or manual dexterity skilful; expert n ˈædɛpt a person who is skilled or proficient in something Etymology: 17th Century: from Medieval Latin adeptus, from Latin adipiscī to attain, from ad- to + apiscī to attain aˈdeptness n
adept | meaning of adept in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English . . . From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English ad‧ept ˈædept, əˈdept $ əˈdept adjective good at something that needs care and skill SYN skilful adept at Melissa quickly became adept at predicting his moods adept in Silas proved adept in the art of avoiding potholes in the road
Adept - Definition, Meaning Synonyms | Vocabulary. com Try the adjective adept! In the days of Medieval Latin, an adeptus was a person who had learned the secrets of alchemy Although an adept person today cannot turn lead into gold, the adjective is still high praise meaning "skilled, expert, highly proficient "