Definitions

from The Century Dictionary.

  • noun An obsolete form of ability.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • noun obsolete Ability; aptitude.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun Obsolete form of ability.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

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Examples

  • He is a great acrobat and figther but is more than that, in other VideoGame movie protagonist are what the protagonist of teh game was a shooter or an martial arts artist and the whole movie turns around that specific hability

    Review: Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time | The Movie Blog 2010

  • Humanity engages in many outrages, against each other, against ourselves, against the hability of our planet.

    A. Siegel: Tar and Feather... 2009

  • Bikes, just as PCs, have a performance that is far superior than the needs, hability or capacity of their users in competitive cycling it´s necessary to define minimum wheight on bikes.

    Contre-La-Mantra: Streamlining Your Sales Pitch BikeSnobNYC 2009

  • “Hmmm…isn´t it part of the market the hability of workers to form unions and negotiate for better salaries for themselves?”

    Bayonet-point capitalism 2006

  • Hmmm…isn´t it part of the market the hability of workers to form unions and negotiate for better salaries for themselves?

    Bayonet-point capitalism 2006

  • John T. Kennedy: "Hmmm…isn´t it part of the market the hability of workers to form unions and negotiate for better salaries for themselves?"

    Rad Geek People’s Daily – 2006 – December – 22 2006

  • Hello.com, from Google, which gives you unlimited bandwith and unlimited space, and the hability of a "chat and transfer" app?

    Host your images 2005

  • Our youth, at School or University, starts on his native classics with a hability which in any foreign language he has painfully to acquire.

    VI. On a School of English 1920

  • The guest, in virtue of a certain hability that is part of his natural equipment, can more or less ape the ways of a host.

    "Hosts and Guests" 1919

  • Where he of himself hath neither strength nor hability;

    A Select Collection of Old English Plays, Volume 6 William Carew Hazlitt 1873

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