0 a skill or an ability to do something easily and well -- 技能;本领;技巧
There's a knack to using this corkscrew. 用这个瓶塞钻有个诀窍。
She has the knack of making people feel comfortable. 她有让人如沐春风的本事。
a knack for remembering faces 记人脸的本领
He has an uncanny knack of unnerving me by presenting yet another scheme or another set of ideas, but he has profound knowledge.
Moreover, tomorrow's critics have an uncanny knack of blaming today's legislators.
Now we are up in the realms of £400, so these things do have a knack of growing spectacularly.
Knack (1999) did not include these measures in the narrow definition of social capital.
Children now have a knack for word learning; and learn five, ten, or even twenty new words a day.
It is only natural that a homogeneous people crowded onto four smallish islands should value the ability to avoid confrontation - the knack, one might say, of getting along with everybody.
Sachs was a journalist before earning his doctorate, and his knack for telling a story survived graduate school wholly intact.
So these were people with the knack.