quick

quick
quick 1 fleet, swift, rapid, *fast, speedy, expeditious, hasty
Analogous words: brisk, nimble, *agile: abrupt, impetuous, *precipitate, headlong
2 Quick, prompt, ready, apt are comparable when they apply to persons, their mental operations, their acts, and their words and mean having or manifesting the ability to respond without delay or hesitation.
Quick stresses instancy of response to such an extent that it usually connotes native rather than acquired power
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quick eyes

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quick in perception

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examined the hall and the men who passed, with the same quick, sharp cunning— O'Flaherty

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Very often the word suggests marked capacity for learning or for absorbing what is taught
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even as a child she had had a quick mind, a gift of mimicry, an excellent memory— Wouk

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Prompt also implies instancy of response, but it may or may not imply native quickness. Often it carries a suggestion of preparation (as by training or discipline) that fits one for quick response when the occasion demands it
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prompt service

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prompt eloquence

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prompt insight into the workings of complex apparatus— F. H. Garrison

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Sometimes the word carries so strong an implication of willingness or eagerness that a lack of normal inhibitions is also suggested
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they press so eagerly to savor the purity, the heroism, that matches their prompt imaginings— Hackett

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Ready, like prompt, implies previous training or a strong predisposition as well as instancy of response, but it more often characterizes the person or his powers than his performance or his expression of thought or feeling. It therefore often implies, as prompt does not, skill, facility, fluency, or ease in attainment
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reading maketh a full man, conference a ready man—Bacon

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he was not a ready speaker, and so . . . had written out what he had to say— Scudder

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The word is often applied to the bodily organ or to the instrument one uses in manifesting skill or fluency
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he has a ready tongue

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a pair of ready hands

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Apt (see also FIT; APT 2) does not throw the emphasis on the quickness of the response, though that is involved in its meaning, but on the possession of qualities (as a high degree of intelligence, a particular talent or gift, or a strong bent) which make for such quickness. It is therefore especially appropriate when the person in mind responds quickly only to particular stimuli or shows a capacity for a definite kind of work
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she is apt at drawing but not at arithmetic

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supple, sinew-corded, apt at armsTennyson

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apt as he was in attack or report . . . [he] was readier still to give mercy— Max well Anderson

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Analogous words: *intelligent, clever, smart, quick-witted: deft, adroit, *dexterous: *sharp, acute, keen
Antonyms: sluggish

New Dictionary of Synonyms. 2014.

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  • Quick — (von englisch „schnell“) bezeichnet: Quick (Zeitschrift), ein ehemaliges deutsches Zeitungsmagazin Quick (Geldkarte), die elektronische Geldbörse in Österreich Quick (Programmiersprache), eine an C angelehnte Programmiersprache für Atari Computer …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Quick — Quick, a. [Compar. {Quicker}; superl. {Quickest}.] [As. cwic, cwicu, cwucu, cucu, living; akin to OS. quik, D. kwik, OHG. quec, chec, G. keck bold, lively, Icel. kvikr living, Goth. qius, Lith. q[=y]vas, Russ. zhivoi, L. vivus living, vivere to… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Quick — may refer to: * Quick (newspaper), a product of The Dallas Morning News in Texas * QUICK screening, a method to detect endogenous protein protein interactions with very high confidence * Quick clay, a unique form of highly sensitive marine clay * …   Wikipedia

  • quick — [kwik] adj. [ME quik, lively, alive < OE cwicu, living: see BIO ] 1. Archaic living; alive 2. a) rapid; swift [a quick walk] b) done with promptness; prompt [a quick reply] c) …   English World dictionary

  • Quick — Quick, n. 1. That which is quick, or alive; a living animal or plant; especially, the hawthorn, or other plants used in making a living hedge. [1913 Webster] The works . . . are curiously hedged with quick. Evelyn. [1913 Webster] 2. The life; the …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • quick — [ kwik ] n. m. • 1956; nom déposé; mot angl. « rapide » ♦ Matière synthétique dure, poreuse et rougeâtre, utilisée comme revêtement de courts de tennis en plein air. Courts de tennis en quick ou en terre battue. Jouer sur du quick. ⊗ HOM. Couic.… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • quick — ► ADJECTIVE 1) moving fast. 2) lasting or taking a short time: a quick worker. 3) with little or no delay; prompt. 4) intelligent. 5) (of a person s eye or ear) keenly perceptive. 6) (of temper) easily roused. ► NOUN …   English terms dictionary

  • quick — quick; quick·hatch; quick·ie; quick·ly; quick·ness; quick·en; over·quick·ly; …   English syllables

  • Quick — Quick, adv. In a quick manner; quickly; promptly; rapidly; with haste; speedily; without delay; as, run quick; get back quick. [1913 Webster] If we consider how very quick the actions of the mind are performed. Locke. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • quick — [adj1] fast, speedy abrupt, accelerated, active, agile, alert, a move on*, animated, ASAP*, breakneck*, brief, brisk, cursory, curt, double time*, energetic, expeditious, expeditive, express, fleet, flying, going, harefooted*, hasty, headlong,… …   New thesaurus

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