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one-handed

[ wuhn-han-did ]

adjective

  1. having or using only one hand:

    The left fielder made a one-handed catch of the fly ball.



adverb

  1. with one hand:

    to drive one-handed.

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Word History and Origins

Origin of one-handed1

late Middle English word dating back to 1400–50
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

The world's only professional one-handed concert pianist, Nicholas McCarthy, makes his Proms debut, playing a concerto originally written for Paul Wittgenstein, after he lost his right arm during World War One.

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New Zealand's fightback was sparked by a stunning one-handed catch by Glenn Phillips - his third such grab of the tournament - at extra cover to dismiss Gill for 31.

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It was a Burries one-handed dunk in the third quarter Saturday night that sent Roosevelt fans into a frenzy.

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The fans were on their feet and roaring after Mara threw an outlet pass reminiscent of legendary predecessor Bill Walton to Eric Dailey Jr. for a vicious, one-handed dunk.

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Scoring eight unanswered points in only 91 seconds to start the second half, Rutgers surged into its first lead before eventually going up by seven points on Williams’ one-handed floater with 9:59 left.

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Oneg Shabbatone-horse