Re: Does flag waving mean you are patriotic?
Posted: Tue Sep 06, 2022 8:09 am
Same Party, Different House
https://fanlax.com/forum/
This is why, in part, English is a hard language to learn.
ambidexterous, Medieval Latin ambidexter, literally "right-handed on both sides," from ambi- "both, on both sides" (see ambi-) + dexter "right-handed" (from PIE root *deks- "right; south")
“Ambidextrous”…..I had never heard the word until Paul Westphal emerged in the NBA.DMac wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:04 am Well done, Oldbarndog, and I agree, TLD. However, to suggest that Her Holiness was going back to the Latin roots of deplorables and really meant anything other than how the word is defined and used today is bullschidt (another word with more than one meaning, eh?). We, the ignorant, did not misinterpret what she meant.
Another word of Latin origin. Ambidextrous. You think right hand when you hear that word?ambidexterous, Medieval Latin ambidexter, literally "right-handed on both sides," from ambi- "both, on both sides" (see ambi-) + dexter "right-handed" (from PIE root *deks- "right; south")
You had to have had two rights hands if you could use both hands equally comfortably cuz lefties....well, they're just cursed.
A very misused word, if you can do a couple of things with your "off hand" people are quick to say you're ambidextrous and that
aint the meaning of the word at all.
No, I think sinister.DMac wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:04 am Well done, Oldbarndog, and I agree, TLD. However, to suggest that Her Holiness was going back to the Latin roots of deplorables and really meant anything other than how the word is defined and used today is bullschidt (another word with more than one meaning, eh?). We, the ignorant, did not misinterpret what she meant.
Another word of Latin origin. Ambidextrous. You think right hand when you hear that word?ambidexterous, Medieval Latin ambidexter, literally "right-handed on both sides," from ambi- "both, on both sides" (see ambi-) + dexter "right-handed" (from PIE root *deks- "right; south")
You had to have had two rights hands if you could use both hands equally comfortably cuz lefties....well, they're just cursed.
A very misused word, if you can do a couple of things with your "off hand" people are quick to say you're ambidextrous and that
aint the meaning of the word at all.
Are you joking?Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:40 am“Ambidextrous”…..I had never heard the word until Paul Westphal emerged in the NBA.DMac wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:04 am Well done, Oldbarndog, and I agree, TLD. However, to suggest that Her Holiness was going back to the Latin roots of deplorables and really meant anything other than how the word is defined and used today is bullschidt (another word with more than one meaning, eh?). We, the ignorant, did not misinterpret what she meant.
Another word of Latin origin. Ambidextrous. You think right hand when you hear that word?ambidexterous, Medieval Latin ambidexter, literally "right-handed on both sides," from ambi- "both, on both sides" (see ambi-) + dexter "right-handed" (from PIE root *deks- "right; south")
You had to have had two rights hands if you could use both hands equally comfortably cuz lefties....well, they're just cursed.
A very misused word, if you can do a couple of things with your "off hand" people are quick to say you're ambidextrous and that
aint the meaning of the word at all.
You are correct TLD. The queen of evils deplorable comment didn't cost her the election. The queen of evil lost the election because the trump people outsmarted her and found the votes they needed in those swing states the queen of evil, because of her arrogant, condescending nature chose to ignore. The queen of evil was certain her dominance in the liberal NE states and the liberal Western states made her victory a done deal. I'm reminded of those long ago newspaper headlines. Truman holding up the headline .. DEWEY DEFEATS TRUMAN. The queen of evil and her entourage never thought they could lose to a scoundrel like trump. They were busy counting their chicken votes way before they hatched. The only satisfaction of 4 years of trump for myself is forever enjoying in the fact that the WBC suffered a humiliating defeat at the hands of a rank amateur like trump. Her defeat also allowed lamp manufacturers to make mucho dinero.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Maybe she should have bit her tongue but those people she described were in fact deplorable. Did it cost her the election? I don’t believe so. Comey’s announcement and the theft of the DNC Campaign database by the Russian’s and Manafort’s sharing of Internal polling data with the Russians were bigger issues. Comey really killed her…. I do believe it motivated some folks to get out and vote but Hillary still attracted more votes.Farfromgeneva wrote: ↑Mon Sep 05, 2022 9:47 pmQuestion is whether that’s the appropriate approach to take not whether it’s true or politically expedient, IMO. I thought not, and I’m someone who’s says what everyone thinks aloud generally, because even I know that sometimes being right isn’t right and sometimes it doesn’t need to be said. To the extent that her losing made our country worse off it’s a pretty selfish thing to do and I think there’s a cohort of redeemable “deplorables” who are fundamentally good people but need education/understanding of underlying and structural considerations and to deploy a little more empathy (maybe your life isn’t perfect but consider the starving dude who never had a shot for a second) that she threw away like a complete, arrogant jerk who expected to be coronated even though she was eviscerated by a kid with no experience named Barry out of her backyard in 2008.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Mon Sep 05, 2022 5:05 pmIt obviously angered a lot of people…. But the question has been was there any truth to it? Nobody has denied that it costs her votes….DMac wrote: ↑Mon Sep 05, 2022 5:02 pmFrankly, I don't find any of this to be the least bit important...and in the definition I quoted it does say adjective. The fact of the matter is you're what, one in ten thousand who doesn't receive the word as what the definition I quoted is? That's what matters, it pizzed a lot of people off whether they realized what the origin of the word is or not and if they did look it up they saw the definition I quoted and thought, yeah, that's what I thought she meant.PizzaSnake wrote: ↑Mon Sep 05, 2022 3:39 pmDo you gave access to a quality dictionary? The OED?DMac wrote: ↑Mon Sep 05, 2022 1:20 pmPizzaSnake wrote: ↑Mon Sep 05, 2022 1:08 pmDo you doubt it or do you know? Clearly stated that I highly doubt it.Or do you assume that because you didn't know the meaning, that she didn't? Yes, and I'd bet I'm right. She meant sorrow and pain, or low life scumbags? Methinks the latter. Or did you take offense at first blush and stay with that feeling as it offered some intellectual "payoff"? Took absolutely no offense nor did I change in color. Will say again, I very much doubt she would have used the word if she anymore knew the definition of it than did the vast majority of her audience. Always interesting to examine why we do and think what we do and what the reward is.DMac wrote: ↑Mon Sep 05, 2022 11:58 amI highly doubt that Her Holiness used the word to describe the sorrow and grief that these people brought her, she meant it as a derogatory word to describe Trump supporters. She had no more awareness of the meaning of the word than the people she was calling deplorables. Had she thought the definition would be received as what the definition actually is, she would have used different words such as low life scumbags which is exactly what she meant with deplorables.PizzaSnake wrote: ↑Mon Sep 05, 2022 11:41 am"Which definition for deplore comes closest to the meaning of its Latin root word?Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Mon Sep 05, 2022 11:24 am Deplorable:
https://www.americanprogress.org/article/white-supremacy-returned-mainstream-politics/
But I guess it depends……part of Trump’s base:
https://www.splcenter.org/fighting-hate/extremist-files/ideology/white-nationalist
Hillary had it wrong.
Deplore comes from Latin roots that mean "to bewail or lament."
So if you deplore something, you object to it because it brings you sorrow or grief."
I don't think people understood, or understand the way in which this descriptor ("deplorables") was intended. Of course, given the lack of education and general awareness, I'm not surprised.
And no, I don't think that Hillary and Slick Willie (I would describe them as Goldwater Republicans) were free from "sin". They were, and are, far better than tRump and Maga-ism. To paraphrase, "don't let the perfect be the enemy of the better."
Fair, since I assume she did because I did.
Not sure about elections, but words sure have meaning(s). There's a good reason there are over 1M words in the English lexicon and many have gradations, or in some cases, opposite meaning (e.g. cleave). As it has been said of the UK and America, "two people separated by a common language."
Communication is a tricky business.
Further, it doesn't look to me as if your definition/what is meant by the word is right.
deplorable adjective
de·plor·able | \ di-ˈplȯr-ə-bəl \
Definition of deplorable
1: deserving censure or contempt
deplorable behavior
: WRETCHED
deplorable living conditions
2: LAMENTABLE
a deplorable death
Synonyms
cheap, contemptible, cruddy, despicable, dirty, grubby, lame, lousy, mean, nasty, paltry, pitiable, pitiful, ratty, scabby, scummy, scurvy, sneaking, sorry, wretched
Jus' sayin'.
If not, this one is pretty good.
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/deplorable
You will not, however, deplorable is an adjective, not a noun, making
“Clinton’s use of deplorables is ambiguous: the word could be defined here as “people who are deplorable” or “qualities or characteristics that are deplorable.” Part of the ambiguity comes from the novelty of the usage, since deplorable is rarely used as a noun in this way. The Oxford English Dictionary does include a rare use of deplorable as a noun dating to the early 1800s, defined as “deplorable ills,” as in “rheumatism and other deplorables.” There's another example in the February 8, 1838 edition of the Commercial Advertiser (New York, NY): "You have already been informed of all the steps taken by the government to put a final period to these commotions, and I trust that the authors of the deplorables committed in New Mexico, will meet their just reward."
https://www.merriam-webster.com/news-trend-watch/clinton-says-half-of-trump-supporters-are-in-a-basket-of-deplorables-20160910
So I blame her ultimately for a lot of what’s gone down since. She didn’t need to pump up her kicks and try to do a blindfolded tomahawk dunk, nuts to forehead on her opponents before the completion was over. She’s in company with folks like Leon Lett and the fair weather Miami Heat fans trying to get back into their comeback win vs the Spurs.
No. I was maybe 8 or 9 years old.PizzaSnake wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:56 amAre you joking?Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:40 am“Ambidextrous”…..I had never heard the word until Paul Westphal emerged in the NBA.DMac wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:04 am Well done, Oldbarndog, and I agree, TLD. However, to suggest that Her Holiness was going back to the Latin roots of deplorables and really meant anything other than how the word is defined and used today is bullschidt (another word with more than one meaning, eh?). We, the ignorant, did not misinterpret what she meant.
Another word of Latin origin. Ambidextrous. You think right hand when you hear that word?ambidexterous, Medieval Latin ambidexter, literally "right-handed on both sides," from ambi- "both, on both sides" (see ambi-) + dexter "right-handed" (from PIE root *deks- "right; south")
You had to have had two rights hands if you could use both hands equally comfortably cuz lefties....well, they're just cursed.
A very misused word, if you can do a couple of things with your "off hand" people are quick to say you're ambidextrous and that
aint the meaning of the word at all.
You need a dictionary and thesaurus to watch a Knickerbockers game with Clyde Frazier doing color but it's a complete joy to listen to him even for the most mundane/boring games.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:40 am“Ambidextrous”…..I had never heard the word until Paul Westphal emerged in the NBA.DMac wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:04 am Well done, Oldbarndog, and I agree, TLD. However, to suggest that Her Holiness was going back to the Latin roots of deplorables and really meant anything other than how the word is defined and used today is bullschidt (another word with more than one meaning, eh?). We, the ignorant, did not misinterpret what she meant.
Another word of Latin origin. Ambidextrous. You think right hand when you hear that word?ambidexterous, Medieval Latin ambidexter, literally "right-handed on both sides," from ambi- "both, on both sides" (see ambi-) + dexter "right-handed" (from PIE root *deks- "right; south")
You had to have had two rights hands if you could use both hands equally comfortably cuz lefties....well, they're just cursed.
A very misused word, if you can do a couple of things with your "off hand" people are quick to say you're ambidextrous and that
aint the meaning of the word at all.
Yes, as did the Latins and the rest of the world.PizzaSnake wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:56 amNo, I think sinister.DMac wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:04 am Well done, Oldbarndog, and I agree, TLD. However, to suggest that Her Holiness was going back to the Latin roots of deplorables and really meant anything other than how the word is defined and used today is bullschidt (another word with more than one meaning, eh?). We, the ignorant, did not misinterpret what she meant.
Another word of Latin origin. Ambidextrous. You think right hand when you hear that word?ambidexterous, Medieval Latin ambidexter, literally "right-handed on both sides," from ambi- "both, on both sides" (see ambi-) + dexter "right-handed" (from PIE root *deks- "right; south")
You had to have had two rights hands if you could use both hands equally comfortably cuz lefties....well, they're just cursed.
A very misused word, if you can do a couple of things with your "off hand" people are quick to say you're ambidextrous and that
aint the meaning of the word at all.
I love Clyde!Kismet wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 10:00 amYou need a dictionary and thesaurus to watch a Knickerbockers game with Clyde Frazier doing color but it's a complete joy to listen to him even for the most mundane/boring games.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:40 am“Ambidextrous”…..I had never heard the word until Paul Westphal emerged in the NBA.DMac wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:04 am Well done, Oldbarndog, and I agree, TLD. However, to suggest that Her Holiness was going back to the Latin roots of deplorables and really meant anything other than how the word is defined and used today is bullschidt (another word with more than one meaning, eh?). We, the ignorant, did not misinterpret what she meant.
Another word of Latin origin. Ambidextrous. You think right hand when you hear that word?ambidexterous, Medieval Latin ambidexter, literally "right-handed on both sides," from ambi- "both, on both sides" (see ambi-) + dexter "right-handed" (from PIE root *deks- "right; south")
You had to have had two rights hands if you could use both hands equally comfortably cuz lefties....well, they're just cursed.
A very misused word, if you can do a couple of things with your "off hand" people are quick to say you're ambidextrous and that
aint the meaning of the word at all.
https://theathletic.com/3558899/2022/09 ... oadcaster/
Best lines from the above article
“It’s nice to be important, but it’s more important to be nice.”
"Precocious neophyte" - Clyde uses the latter term in lieu of rookie
"lilliputian" - to describe smaller players
"posting and toasting, swishing and dishing, bounding and astounding"
On Friday, Frazier, 77, will receive the Curt Gowdy Award for Electronic Media at the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame. He is the first person already in the Hall of Fame as a player to receive the award individually.
yes, they did make a difference...among other things that mattered in those handful of districts that made the ultimate difference.
Very interesting; thanks for posting the full remarks...she was actually right, both that Trump had appealed to people with a particular set of emotions and beliefs that, yes, are "deplorable" (we all should recall the many voters for Trump who claimed they had never or rarely had voted at all) while also making clear that a large portion of Trump's support was based on feelings that were important to address, to empathize with...and hopefully actually help.ggait wrote: ↑Mon Sep 05, 2022 10:05 pmRead below what she actually said. Doesn't sound like a touchdown dance to me. What Sean Hannity says she said is a different thing.So I blame her ultimately for a lot of what’s gone down since. She didn’t need to pump up her kicks and try to do a blindfolded tomahawk dunk, nuts to forehead on her opponents before the completion was over.
Seems like she was trying to connect to traditional Dem voters -- blue collar, working class. Basically the same folks Tim Ryan is courting in Ohio. Ryan, no surprise, does a better job of it than Hillary ever could.
“You know, to just be grossly generalistic, you could put half of Trump’s supporters into what I call the basket of deplorables. Right?” Clinton said. “The racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic—you name it. And unfortunately there are people like that. And he has lifted them up.”
She said the other half of Trump’s supporters “feel that the government has let them down” and are “desperate for change.”
“Those are people we have to understand and empathize with as well,” she said.
“You know, to just be grossly generalistic, you could put half of Trump’s supporters into what I call the basket of deplorables. Right?” Clinton said. “The racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic—you name it. And unfortunately there are people like that. And he has lifted them up.”
Actually, I am tolerably "abled" with either hand, although developing equal facility with my left hand requires practice to overcome years of habituation. Oddly, certain activites, such as playing table billiards, are easier to perform with my left hand. Learning others requires a mental effort to "undo" mental conditioning and develop muscle memory and coordination, as in throwing a frisbee or ball. As for writing, I have done so little recently with either hand it is increasingly irrelevant.DMac wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 10:03 amYes, as did the Latins and the rest of the world.PizzaSnake wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:56 amNo, I think sinister.DMac wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:04 am Well done, Oldbarndog, and I agree, TLD. However, to suggest that Her Holiness was going back to the Latin roots of deplorables and really meant anything other than how the word is defined and used today is bullschidt (another word with more than one meaning, eh?). We, the ignorant, did not misinterpret what she meant.
Another word of Latin origin. Ambidextrous. You think right hand when you hear that word?ambidexterous, Medieval Latin ambidexter, literally "right-handed on both sides," from ambi- "both, on both sides" (see ambi-) + dexter "right-handed" (from PIE root *deks- "right; south")
You had to have had two rights hands if you could use both hands equally comfortably cuz lefties....well, they're just cursed.
A very misused word, if you can do a couple of things with your "off hand" people are quick to say you're ambidextrous and that
aint the meaning of the word at all.
It's a right hand thinking and right hand constructed world.
See three ring binders and scissors.
"yes, are "deplorable" (we all should recall the many voters for Trump who claimed they had never or rarely had voted at all)"MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 10:49 amVery interesting; thanks for posting the full remarks...she was actually right, both that Trump had appealed to people with a particular set of emotions and beliefs that, yes, are "deplorable" (we all should recall the many voters for Trump who claimed they had never or rarely had voted at all) while also making clear that a large portion of Trump's support was based on feelings that were important to address, to empathize with...and hopefully actually help.ggait wrote: ↑Mon Sep 05, 2022 10:05 pmRead below what she actually said. Doesn't sound like a touchdown dance to me. What Sean Hannity says she said is a different thing.So I blame her ultimately for a lot of what’s gone down since. She didn’t need to pump up her kicks and try to do a blindfolded tomahawk dunk, nuts to forehead on her opponents before the completion was over.
Seems like she was trying to connect to traditional Dem voters -- blue collar, working class. Basically the same folks Tim Ryan is courting in Ohio. Ryan, no surprise, does a better job of it than Hillary ever could.
“You know, to just be grossly generalistic, you could put half of Trump’s supporters into what I call the basket of deplorables. Right?” Clinton said. “The racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic—you name it. And unfortunately there are people like that. And he has lifted them up.”
She said the other half of Trump’s supporters “feel that the government has let them down” and are “desperate for change.”
“Those are people we have to understand and empathize with as well,” she said.
But many people only know what they are being told.
My mom just shared with me an email trail from her friends with an MTG video complaining about the "corruption of Congress", citing the "in the dead of night" passage out of the Rules Committee the omnibus spending bill...with "no opportunity for Republicans to read it"...she repeated these allegations at least 10 times in the video, though she never actually said what "corruption" had occurred.
One of the members of the thread had written back asking to be removed, my mother hadn't read his response re MTG (space lasers and all), but she had watched the video of MTG...she thought she was informing me (and the rest of our family) about this awful thing the Democrats had done...when we explained MTG, she said "how would I know?".
Yup.
I'm much the same, there are many things I can do equally comfortably with both hands, power tools would be one example of that. I do brush my teeth left handed but I'm comfortable in saying that I could learn to do it right handed equally comfortably pretty easily. That would be much tougher for the typical right hander (who I call left hand useless) but we lefties, or mixed handed people (and this is what people who use both hands should be called, they're not ambidextrous) are forced into being more adaptable inasmuch as it's a heavily right handed world....completely understandably so.PizzaSnake wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 11:26 amActually, I am tolerably "abled" with either hand, although developing equal facility with my left hand requires practice to overcome years of habituation. Oddly, certain activites, such as playing table billiards, are easier to perform with my left hand. Learning others requires a mental effort to "undo" mental conditioning and develop muscle memory and coordination, as in throwing a frisbee or ball. As for writing, I have done so little recently with either hand it is increasingly irrelevant.DMac wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 10:03 amYes, as did the Latins and the rest of the world.PizzaSnake wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:56 amNo, I think sinister.DMac wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:04 am Well done, Oldbarndog, and I agree, TLD. However, to suggest that Her Holiness was going back to the Latin roots of deplorables and really meant anything other than how the word is defined and used today is bullschidt (another word with more than one meaning, eh?). We, the ignorant, did not misinterpret what she meant.
Another word of Latin origin. Ambidextrous. You think right hand when you hear that word?ambidexterous, Medieval Latin ambidexter, literally "right-handed on both sides," from ambi- "both, on both sides" (see ambi-) + dexter "right-handed" (from PIE root *deks- "right; south")
You had to have had two rights hands if you could use both hands equally comfortably cuz lefties....well, they're just cursed.
A very misused word, if you can do a couple of things with your "off hand" people are quick to say you're ambidextrous and that
aint the meaning of the word at all.
It's a right hand thinking and right hand constructed world.
See three ring binders and scissors.
Here's a simple test: try brushing your teeth with your "off" hand.
As for bias in manual systems and endeavors, consider the implicit male bias found in most hand tools. Most of them require greater grip strength than most females possess (not that they couldn't and haven't developed greater grip strength). Actually, I might go so far as to say most people lack adequate grip strength to properly wield hand tools effectively and safely.
Wow!!What percentage of people in the world are redheads?
Red is the rarest hair color - only between 1-2% of the world's population are redheads.
I'd agree that a whole lot of people with generally "good" intent, are extremely defensive that their own biases may be interpreted as equivalent to the worst of the worst.DMac wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 11:18 am Trouble is, this wasn't received as how innocent it's now trying to be shown.“You know, to just be grossly generalistic, you could put half of Trump’s supporters into what I call the basket of deplorables. Right?” Clinton said. “The racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic—you name it. And unfortunately there are people like that. And he has lifted them up.”
There were a whole lot of people who figured they were being put in that basket too. The racist is the guy who said the person who hadn't mowed his lawn in a month in a half was lazy. Oh, he was black, so of course this is a racist comment and the commentor now sees himself in Hillary's basket (a perfectly innocent comment).
One doesn't believe women reporters should be in men's locker rooms. That's sexist and that person goes in the basket.
On and on and on with this kind of stuff. However unintentional she put a whole lot more people in that basket than she thought she was and it cost her.
One of my daughters has red hair and blue eyes. The rarest combination, I believe.DMac wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 11:52 amI'm much the same, there are many things I can do equally comfortably with both hands, power tools would be one example of that. I do brush my teeth left handed but I'm comfortable in saying that I could learn to do it right handed equally comfortably pretty easily. That would be much tougher for the typical right hander (who I call left hand useless) but we lefties, or mixed handed people (and this is what people who use both hands should be called, they're not ambidextrous) are forced into being more adaptable inasmuch as it's a heavily right handed world....completely understandably so.PizzaSnake wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 11:26 amActually, I am tolerably "abled" with either hand, although developing equal facility with my left hand requires practice to overcome years of habituation. Oddly, certain activites, such as playing table billiards, are easier to perform with my left hand. Learning others requires a mental effort to "undo" mental conditioning and develop muscle memory and coordination, as in throwing a frisbee or ball. As for writing, I have done so little recently with either hand it is increasingly irrelevant.DMac wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 10:03 amYes, as did the Latins and the rest of the world.PizzaSnake wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:56 amNo, I think sinister.DMac wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:04 am Well done, Oldbarndog, and I agree, TLD. However, to suggest that Her Holiness was going back to the Latin roots of deplorables and really meant anything other than how the word is defined and used today is bullschidt (another word with more than one meaning, eh?). We, the ignorant, did not misinterpret what she meant.
Another word of Latin origin. Ambidextrous. You think right hand when you hear that word?ambidexterous, Medieval Latin ambidexter, literally "right-handed on both sides," from ambi- "both, on both sides" (see ambi-) + dexter "right-handed" (from PIE root *deks- "right; south")
You had to have had two rights hands if you could use both hands equally comfortably cuz lefties....well, they're just cursed.
A very misused word, if you can do a couple of things with your "off hand" people are quick to say you're ambidextrous and that
aint the meaning of the word at all.
It's a right hand thinking and right hand constructed world.
See three ring binders and scissors.
Here's a simple test: try brushing your teeth with your "off" hand.
As for bias in manual systems and endeavors, consider the implicit male bias found in most hand tools. Most of them require greater grip strength than most females possess (not that they couldn't and haven't developed greater grip strength). Actually, I might go so far as to say most people lack adequate grip strength to properly wield hand tools effectively and safely.
Others have inconveniences too such as the vertically challenged. At 4' 10" (my gdaughter is 4' 10 & half") there's not much in the world made for you. Back seat of the car is like a queen sized bed if you're forced to sleep in car though.
How as a redhead do you not stand out in the crowd?Wow!!What percentage of people in the world are redheads?
Red is the rarest hair color - only between 1-2% of the world's population are redheads.