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agile
[aj-uhl, -ahyl]
adjective
quick and well-coordinated in movement; lithe.
an agile leap.
Antonyms: awkwardan agile person.
marked by an ability to think quickly; mentally acute or aware.
She's 95 and still very agile.
noting or relating to a philosophy of product development and production intended to create and distribute batches of working products in a short period of time with subsequent batches planned in a cyclical schedule of improvement, production, and distribution: agile manufacturing;
agile software programming;
agile manufacturing;
agile teams.
noun
Sometimes Agile an iterative and collaborative philosophy of rapid product development and production.
Agile is being used by more and more companies outside of the tech sector.
agile
/ əˈdʒɪlɪtɪ, ˈædʒaɪl /
adjective
quick in movement; nimble
mentally quick or acute
Other Word Forms
- agilely adverb
- agileness noun
- unagile adjective
- unagilely adverb
- agility noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of agile1
Example Sentences
And companies should encourage managers and employees to remain agile by making it simpler to rotate into other parts of the company, even if just in the short term.
Some older club patrons strode in with the aid of walking sticks, less agile than they used to be but determined to pay their respects to “Mama Jewel.”
"It can be more perceptive. It can see the target sooner than a human can. It can be more agile."
In small factories across America, agile automatons are making everything from parts for AI supercomputers to the hulls of America’s future autonomous naval weapons.
There is not yet much coming with “Something Coming,” but his agile voice is a clean, clear tenor projectile expandable into operatic fortissimos and toned down into sweet, soft Broadway-esque whispers.
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