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单词 suit
释义

Definition of suit in English:

suit

noun suːtsut
  • 1A set of outer clothes made of the same fabric and designed to be worn together, typically consisting of a jacket and trousers or a jacket and skirt.

    一套衣服(通常由上衣和裤子或上衣和裙子组成)

    a pinstriped suit
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Cerruti has veered away from innocuous and terribly predictable suits; away from trousers, jacket, belt and shoes in perfect harmony.
    • He probably also designs those fantastically expensive suits and clothes as well, doodling them down on the backs of team sheets during langours in play.
    • For that distinct, chic western look, the outlet has a complete range of suits and jackets made of imported fabric from Italy and Japan.
    • Ideally, you should avoid wearing fully lined suits and jackets on hot summer days.
    • But then, many in those days wore three-piece suits and the vest effectively hid the bottom of the tie.
    • In an effort to boost pride in York, it was agreed cabbies should wear smart suits, tailored trousers and black dress shoes in winter.
    • Sporty looks were attractive, too, in cafe au lait and dark brown leather shorts outfits with turned-up sleeves on the blouses, or skirt suits.
    • City smart looks include neat fit suits, pencil skirts, mini skirts, sleek trousers and fine knitwear.
    • That is how sportswear manufacturers describe their latest suits designed to help Olympic competitors fight the summer heat in Athens.
    • Two men rose from among the audience, one young, in a khaki suit with short trousers, the other older, with a white shirt.
    • The man in the pinstriped suit and bowler hat is tapping his silver-topped cane on the breakfast table to emphasise each key point of his masterplan for the future well-being of the nation.
    • In cities, men wear lightweight suits or shirts and trousers that suit Venezuela's climate.
    • The firm makes fabrics for men's suits and women's tailored garments.
    • He has a great selection of fabrics, and can design suits in the standard English and American styles, as well as adjust for current trends and your taste.
    • Her skirt suits were versatile enough for the office and other social occasions.
    • His dress sense too is said to be impeccable, but conservative: wearing well-cut classic suits, and plain shirts.
    • My question is, what is the proper shirt-and-tie combo to wear with a pinstriped suit?
    • The trench coat is a great jacket for workdays, to wear over suits or even sport jackets.
    • I tried on new tops, pants, jeans, suits, and jackets and made my selection.
    • Choose jackets, tailored suits and shirtwaist dresses with straight, classic cuts.
    Synonyms
    outfit, set of clothes, costume, ensemble
    clothing, dress, attire, finery
    habit, garb, livery
    informal get-up, gear, togs, garms, duds
    British informal kit, clobber
    rhyming slang whistle (and flute)
    formal apparel
    archaic vestments
    1. 1.1 A set of clothes to be worn for a particular activity.
      (在特殊场合或为特殊活动穿的)一套衣服
      a jogging suit

      慢跑运动服。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • They watched these two men, and as soon as the bird flew from the nest they began to crawl forward in their gilly suits.
      • Dangerous contaminants at the crash site required the team members to wear full rubber protective suits for their safety.
      • He had a spotty complexion and wore a striped T-shirt and blue Reebok track suit.
      • Shane gets in to the swing of things by donning a convincing cowboy suit during his performance.
      • If you are still clinging to polyester ski pants and an old knit, long sleeved, bike jersey as your race suit, consider Lycra.
      • But staff refused to let him back even though he was dressed smartly in his club suit after helping his team beat Mansfield 4-1 on penalties.
      • Here two of the more junior sailors donned their dive suits and swam 500m out to the team's rigid inflatable boat, which was moored off the beach each night.
      • Don't use a powerlifting suit or shirt; special clothing will make you depend more on momentum than on muscle.
      • He explained that the chemical suits would also be employed in the event of a chemical spill or other incident involving hazardous materials.
      • Being cold is no fun, so pack the right diving suit and be damned, but remember that your head is the area of greatest heat loss.
      • All of it looked familiar - except the shiny, glow-in-the-dark running suits designed by Emilio Sosa.
      • A two-man recompression chamber was provided, as was a protective suit which would be worn by a sailor called to inspect and destroy unexploded ordnance.
      • Even Russian men, whose clothing choice was once limited to polyester business suits or polyester jogging suits, have become fussy dressers.
      • He attempted to enter the ship by the funnel but nearly went up in a puff of smoke due to the non fire retardant Santa suit.
      • The wearing of the jogging suit by the non-jogging public, I contend, is the heralding of the downfall of American society.
      • Diving history is illustrated through several odd contraptions, from early submersion suits like the one pictured to modern, state-of-the art technology.
      • Firefighters again donned protective suits and collected the powder for forensic examination.
      • Today, he clings to memories and a photograph of his dad donning his green flight suit.
      • He was the man in the fire-red jogging suit and the wild processed hair inspired by James Brown.
      • Sailors dash around in fearnought firefighting suits.
      Synonyms
      outfit, clothes, costume, ensemble, clothing, dress, attire, garments, garb, turnout, rig, uniform, livery, array, regalia, robes, finery
    2. 1.2 A complete set of pieces of armour for covering the whole body.
      一副盔甲
      a suit of armour
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It's made from very elaborate moulds out of very thin latex, and once everything is on it's kind of like a suit of armour.
      • At the Seattle Art Museum he is presenting six sculptures, including a suit of armor made from hundreds of dog tags.
      • Research in the Metropolitan Museum of Art turned up a screw of the 1480s attaching parts of a suit of armor.
      • The Grand Vestibule is hung with suits of armour and displays of old weaponry.
      • One of the first things Rosemary does before opening her farm shop in the village of Camembert is don a suit of armour - one forged in her imagination.
      • He emerged a moment later carrying the unassembled pieces of a suit of armor a golden bronze in color.
      • She was raised in a castle, where Augustus John once famously found her father reading The Times in a suit of armour.
      • Businesses are expected to adorn their premises with the flag of St George, while the figure of England's patron saint, clad in a suit of armour, will ride on horseback through the town.
      • ‘They saw us,’ he panted as he quickly toppled a suit of armor and wedged it up against the bottom of the door.
      • ‘I went to him to buy a suit of armour and ended up persuading him to take part as well,’ said John.
      • The shell of a mollusc isn't a suit of armour like that worn by crustaceans such as the crab.
      • Many brave knights died while trying to kill the huge beast, the legend goes - until one day, a local hero named Peter took on the worm while wearing a suit of armour covered with razor blades.
      • This protects the body of the animal like a suit of armour.
      • It's a constant battle with the management - you need a suit of armour, not overalls, to come to work.
      • If you, like Colthirst, find yourself donning a suit of armor at work, then your workplace has become a battlefield.
      • She dragged him down the hall and they hid behind a suit of armor.
      • It was like one of those Monty Python sketches where a man in a suit of armour walks in and slaps everyone with a rubber chicken.
      • For some reason this sight brings to mind a snooker ball balanced on a suit of armour.
      • Clad in a suit of white armor and flying her own standard she liberated France from the English at the battle of Orleans.
      • One of the waza chefs turns his pots and pans into a suit of armour and marches on the newly constructed religious site, with humour his only weapon.
      • Just what Anakin's decision is, why he makes it and how it leads him to don a suit of black armour have been the stuff of Star Wars legend.
    3. 1.3informal A high-ranking executive in an organization, typically one regarded as exercising influence in an impersonal way.
      〈非正式〉(企业或机构中的)高级管理人员
      maybe now the suits in Washington will listen

      也许现在华盛顿的那些高级行政长官们会听一听了。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • You, on the other hand, are a nobody, a bureaucrat, a stuffed suit.
      • Now, armed with the SEC's decision that the accounting dodge had a material impact for investors, those suits may require a bigger payout to go away.
      • Despite Chimpzilla's recent string of victories over Intel, the steady stream of senior suits jumping ship must give cause for concern.
      • The Union's new boss has overhauled the suits in Murrayfield such that there are new heads of department occupying just about every office going, from marketing to media via finance.
      • When music is free (in both senses) record companies, suits, agents, will be redundant.
      • I flew through the hallway quickly, getting rid of the suits in the process.
      • Now we have a procession of suits and ‘yes’ men.
      • Kahane wants nothing to do with the studio suit who has spurned him for so long, and storms out.
      • The train is the commuter service from Waterloo, and as such, packed with suits escaping their city jobs for something semi-detached in Hampshire.
      • The issue wouldn't have entered the public domain were it not for the suits within these organisations discussing these proposals over a coffee when on SPL business.
      • Yet striking the right balance between the artists and the suits remains remarkably hard.
      • So we cobble something together, the suits smile sweetly, the auditors tick their boxes, and everyone is happy, including the bad guys.
      • It's not all about suits, lawyers and accountants - it's about rock 'n' roll and creativity.
      • The ever-present green-and white clad gaggle of fans surround the main entrance to Celtic Park, all of them gazing with intent at the procession of suits and tracksuits inside.
      • And what about the endless fulminating about how those arch-conservative suits in the music business are shutting down anti-war thought?
      • I saw some London executive, up in Edinburgh for a meeting with the suits at Scottish Widows or wherever.
      • And voters identify with actors and musicians much more than with the suits who run the record and movie industries.
      Synonyms
      businessman, businesswoman, business person, executive, bureaucrat, administrator, manager, director
  • 2Any of the sets into which a pack of playing cards is divided (in conventional packs comprising spades, hearts, diamonds, and clubs).

    (一副牌中的)所有花色相同的一组牌

    Example sentencesExamples
    • All remaining cards from the other two suits are taken out of play.
    • Like cards, piecepack components are divided into suits: Suns, Moons, Arms, and Crowns.
    • The game also rewards your persistence by giving you a new map after beating the diamond suits.
    • The other players must all play spades if they can, but players 2 and 3 have no spades and so are allowed to play other suits.
    • Therefore the ace of diamonds is the lowest card of its suit when diamonds are not trumps.
    • If another card is led, it can be played instead of playing one of your other cards of the same suit.
    • There is no ranking between the suits - so for example the king of hearts and the king of spades are equal.
    • On the other hand, if it was a group, you would not need to specify the suits represented by the jokers.
    • To a three-card set with two jokers you could add any two of the three missing suits, releasing one of the jokers and forming a closed four-card set.
    • The 56 Minor Arcana cards are divided into four suits, much like traditional playing cards.
    • These have since been further developed to the four symbols of magical elements, to also be seen on Tarot packs as the four suits.
    • The Hanafunda deck consisted of 48 cards divided in 12 different suits, one for each month of the year.
    • Tiles in a set of Chinese dominoes are divided into two suits (Civil and Military).
    • A ‘straight’ is five cards in consecutive order, any combination of suits.
    • The classic order of suits is hearts above diamonds, and spades above clubs.
    • The cards are divided into three suits of twelve cards each.
    • Samba is a variation in which it is possible to meld cards in sequence in a suit as well as sets of equal cards.
    • It is generally easiest to divide a deck by suits, and then give each player all the cards of one suit.
    • The suits for this purpose are ranked Spades, Hearts, Clubs, Diamonds
    • If you play this variation, you can sometimes use a joker profitably to lengthen one of your suits.
  • 3A lawsuit.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Shareholder suits are designed to be a final, desperation remedy, not a knee-jerk reaction.
    • Of course, there is always the sanction of prosecutions or civil suits, and those must always remain the primary sanction for any breach of the criminal or civil law.
    • It is because such acts or omissions affect the public at large that they are punishable as offences at common law and are actionable at the suit of the Attorney-General on behalf of the public.
    • The rule would require every malpractice suit to have a certificate of merit.
    • Thus the position now acknowledged is that in an appropriate case a claimant in a negligence suit may establish a prima facie case by relying on the fact of the accident.
    • Such clauses need not prevent the prosecution of meritorious suits.
    • There is no reason to fear a flood of negligence suits against barristers.
    • Plaintiffs' lawyers often turn instead to personal injury suits.
    • The Amendment only withholds federal judicial power in suits against the state by citizens of another state, or by citizens or subjects of any foreign state.
    • The main reason is that only the better off may be able to afford to move into separate accommodation and wait for two years before reaching a property settlement in the divorce suit.
    • Ads designed to assemble litigants for class action suits represent an explosive area of growth in legal advertising.
    • Now, wives routinely join their husbands' personal injury suits to assert their own claims.
    • It is in the interests of public policy to discourage suits and encourage settlements.
    • However, some of the proposals on the table go far beyond establishing the procedures that govern tort suits brought in federal court.
    • Comparatively few litigants bring suits, or defend them, at their own expense.
    • This focuses attention on what in my view is the single important difference between judicial review and civil suit, the differing time limits.
    • Since society has a minimal concern with the outcome of such private suits, plaintiff's burden of proof is a mere preponderance of the evidence.
    • If a plaintiff wins his suit in public nuisance, he can receive both money damages and injunctive relief.
    • They are blanketing hundreds of small and large Web sites with lawsuits, threats of suits and demands for licensing payments.
    • Lawsuits in particular class-action legal suits, can provide some redress.
    Synonyms
    legal action, lawsuit, suit at law, case, court case, action, cause, legal proceeding/process, proceedings, judicial proceedings, litigation, trial, legal dispute/contest, bringing to book, bringing of charges, indictment, prosecution
  • 4The process of trying to win a woman's affection with a view to marriage.

    追求(常指求婚)

    he could not compete with John in Marian's eyes and his suit came to nothing

    在玛丽安的眼中,他不能匹敌约翰的魅力,所以他的求婚毫无结果。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The knight undertakes a love suit to the daughter of Selestinus, a wise emperor in Rome, and certain strange terms are agreed upon between them as the condition of her favor.
    • He took the rejection of his suit to the princess hard, and has plotted revenge against those caused the rejection of his suit.
    Synonyms
    courtship, wooing, courting, addresses, attentions, homage, pursuit
    respects, blandishments
    1. 4.1literary A petition or entreaty made to a person in authority.
      〈诗/文〉(向当权者提出的)请愿;请求
      he sought a passage to Christian lands, but they spurned his suit
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The ambassador for Poland is returning from Rome having made suit to the Pope for 20,000 crowns.
      • The first concerns his suit to the Queen for the return of Waltham Forest, the second his suit to the Queen for a licence to bring certain commodities into the realm, and the third a petition brought by one Thomas Gurley against Oxford's wife.
      Synonyms
      entreaty, supplication, plea, prayer, appeal, request, application, invocation
  • 5A complete set of sails required for a ship or for a set of spars.

    一套篷帆

    they went ashore and changed to another suit of sails
    Example sentencesExamples
    • So, even in this computer-age, the ultimate proving ground of a new suit of sails remains the race course, the way it should be.
    • A new vessel would always be provided with at least two suits of sails from the sail-making firm engaged by the owner.
verb suːtsut
[with object]
  • 1Be convenient for or acceptable to.

    适合,适宜于

    what time would suit you?
    no object the flat has two bedrooms—if it suits, you can have one of them

    这套房子有两间卧室,如果合你的意,你可以住一间。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • An income protection policy may suit his needs far better.
    • The athletes should be able to come to these grounds and practise whenever it suits them.
    • But in their own ways all are equally impressive, and anyone wanting to build a cantata collection can confidently mix and match as it suits them.
    • And yet most people don't have a credit card that ideally suits their needs.
    • We don't like it when politicians change their minds or try to reinterpret previous actions or statements according to what suits the current social climate.
    • Choose the fabric and finish that best suits your purpose and budget.
    • Coherent rubber compositions obtained by the method are well suited for use as play surfaces or sports surfaces.
    • Architects will be looking for surfacing which suits the town square feel, and the boulevard of upswept maple trees planned for the east side of the High Street.
    • While it is true that prices are formed from the subjective valuations of the economic actors, we cannot suspend the laws of supply and demand whenever it suits our goals.
    • The M74 is just half a mile from the property, which is probably a bit too close for convenience, although it may suit those commuting to Edinburgh or Glasgow - both of which are about an hour's drive away.
    • Burton's characteristic gothic style is perfectly suited to this retelling of an old Russian folk tale.
    • Maria Callas needs no promotion, yet her distinctively fiery, passionate style was not equally suited to every role.
    • The companies offering cards, on the other hand, get to adjust their medication prices whenever it suits them.
    • They play their cards in a completely random fashion, laying down and picking up whenever it suits them.
    • However, the obsessive-compulsive actress is not well suited to the task.
    • Its courses are available on computers connected to the internet, so workers can learn wherever and whenever it suits them and you.
    • The small flat that he kept in Horsham perfectly suited her needs.
    • When it comes to mortgages, the mainstream banks have been relatively slow to adjust their acceptance criteria to suit this new environment.
    • At the same time, I feel that the bowling attack of the hosts is more suited to Test matches than one-dayers.
    • Their personalities were ideally suited to the task at hand.
    Synonyms
    be convenient for, be acceptable to, be suitable for, meet the requirements of, satisfy the demands of, be in line with the wishes of
    befit, match, complement, go with
    informal fit the bill
    make appropriate to/for, make fitting to/for, tailor, fashion, accommodate, adjust, adapt, modify, fit, gear, equip, design
    (be suited to) be cut out for
    1. 1.1suit oneselfoften in imperative Act entirely according to one's own wishes (often used to express the speaker's annoyance)
      完全随自己的意愿行事(常用于表达说话者的不满)
      ‘I'm not going to help you.’ ‘Suit yourself.’

      “我不会帮你的。”“随你的便吧。”

      Example sentencesExamples
      • In a word, they were doing what every elite in unaccountable institutions do, doing what suited themselves.
      • It appears in your letter, you are manipulating God's word to suit yourself.
      • Let those who want to study Shakespeare suit themselves.
      • I don't think so, for the Government doesn't back date anything unless it suits themselves.
      • They are private clubs and can to a large extent suit themselves.
      • Departments suited themselves about typefaces and headings.
      • And then of course the series gets cancelled or new designers decide they don't like the old story and change everything to suit themselves, resulting in an incomprehensible mess.
      • You see this desperation in the way they respond to our every little action and in the way they twist our words to suit themselves.
      • Yet I suppose Inuit have always modified Christianity to suit themselves, a traditional cosmology with the formal overlay of religion.
      • The module based system of learning allows learners to take courses at times to suit themselves and take time out if they need to.
      • Again despite all the huffing and puffing, despite Cork's famous facility for interpreting the rule-book to suit themselves, that was wrong too.
      • Carve the bird to suit yourself; I like to do it in the roasting tin.
      • Obey the law or take the rap - you can't pick and choose to suit yourself.
      • We don't have big healthy meals but instead the trend is for lots of baby dishes, which is billed as ‘tasting’ or ‘grazing’ menus, which allow customers to mix, pick, share and generally suit themselves.
      • And just those who argued over Luther, those who want to use Columba for their own arguments pick and choose the bits of the truth which most suit themselves.
      • You also have a knack for inventing new words to suit yourself.
      • The tribunal heard that up to 60 per cent of staff at North College had been against the merger, and it was claimed many had acted unprofessionally by being uncooperative and even altering timetables to suit themselves.
      • Everybody else can suit themselves but this is my democratic choice.
      • Smaller drivers can also adjust their seats to 14 different positions to suit themselves.
      • But history will be kind to him mainly because the victors write the history and they write it to suit themselves.
    2. 1.2suit something toarchaic Adapt something to.
      they took care to suit their answers to the questions put to them

      他们小心地回答,以便使答案和对他们提出的问题相符合。

  • 2Enhance the features, figure, or character of (someone)

    适合(某人)

    the dress didn't suit her

    那件连衣裙不适合她穿。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Robert is a very animated character, so Opera suits him for sure.
    • He had on a navy blue suit that really suited him, with a plain red tie knotted round his neck.
    • This year, Kirtilal Kalidas have come out with a range of ornaments styled to suit people of all ages.
    • Furthermore, the traditional unpredictability of the Monaco Grand Prix is a characteristic which suits the maverick team from Silverstone and offers the hope of a better result.
    • I had purple hair for a while, but blue suits me better.
    • The brown leather jacket and blue jeans suited him well, outlining and enhancing his figure.
    • Get to know your own features and see what suits you as an individual.
    • For evening, the abundance of choices here means that there is a dress style to suit every woman.
    • She looked in the full length mirror that hung on the wall, and smiled; the dress suited her quite well.
    • Never mind the idea that blue and green should never be seen: red and blue just do not suit you.
    • The gown, in pure white satin, had only some small delicate decorations on the front that suited her slim figure perfectly.
    • One friend told reporters yesterday the designer was delighted with how well the dress suits his client.
    • Each voice suits the character's personality well.
    • The brilliant Autumn / Winter collection features colours, styles and prices to suit every woman.
    • Flatter your figure with a wedding dress that suits you.
    • Make at least one appointment with the bridal room of a big store and enjoy finding the style of dress which suits you best, with the help of expert staff.
    • In a recent interview, he had admitted that he had become choosy and was going in for roles that suited his personality.
    • Some guy at work yesterday said that blue really suited me.
    • Stay fit, dress to suit our figure, get a flattering hairstyle, and enhance nature with the right touch of makeup.
    • It takes little attention to a child's psyche and character to know what suits him or her best.
    Synonyms
    look attractive on, enhance the appearance of, look right on, look good on, become, flatter, show to advantage, set off, enhance, ornament, grace
    informal do something for
  • 3North American no object Put on clothes, especially for a particular activity.

    〈北美〉(尤指为特定的活动)穿衣

    I suited up and entered the water

    我穿上游泳衣,下了水。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • We suited up and told the captain we were standing by to pull the helicopter out of the hangar for launch.
    • Any work done while suited up, such as lifting equipment, makes you sweat more.
    • I suited up, donning the most complex all-weather gear imaginable to man.
    • So I got my youngest brother Sam suited up and grabbed my two cameras and shot over there.
    • On the Swarthmore side of the field, there were more kids suited up than there were fans in the bleachers.
    • Although Detroit had nothing left to play for, everyone on the team suited up and played at playoff speed.
    • But when Aces did not ice a team this year, he suited up with the Mohawks.
    • Pellegrino begins to suit up; he'll do a drift dive, letting the current pull him along as he examines the hull.
    • We suited up and trooped into this small white-tiled room.
    • And I think one of the things that has become very apparent is, we suited up for the war, but we didn't really suit up for the peace adequately.
    • In the billboard ad, yoga class attendees adopted meditative positions suited up in the spa's yellow gym suits.
    • I confidently unloaded the bike, suited up, and swung my leg over the bike to get rolling.
    • At 7,000 feet we finished suiting up and sat in their laps so we could get attached to their rigs.
    • I've suited up like that twice a week all summer down here and have lost about 10 pounds.
    • He suited up during workouts and often invaded the clubhouse before and after games.
    • We got suited up with our life jackets, helmets and sprayskirts, and then put our kayaks in the water.
    • Neely, of course, was born in Comox and suited up for the Vancouver Canucks for three seasons starting in 1983.
    • After a thorough brief, we suited up and began walking up to the flight deck.
    • It comes with a lush terrycloth towel that attaches to Velcro on the inside of the mat, making for a soft place to stand and get suited up.
    • When the red phone rings the crew have 90 seconds to get suited up and get the boat out on the water.

Phrases

  • suit the action to the word

    • Carry out one's stated intentions.

      说到做到

      he backed away, fearing she might suit the action to the word
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He does, however, quote the passage from Hamlet on suiting the action to the word and comments: ‘The actors were not to identify with character.’
      • Let your own discretion be your tutor; suit the action to the word, the word to the action.
      • Mary said no, but she would go and ask me; and, suiting the action to the word, she left them standing on the doorstep and, knocking at my bedroom door, asked me when I should be in.
      • And, suiting his action to his words, the president visited each political party's station at the IEC, followed by a large media contingent and a bundle of bodyguards.
      • Once achieved, such a profile makes it possible to ‘suit the action to the word and the word to the action’, as Hamlet told the players.
      • As Sam said this, he suited the action to the word, and whistled far louder.
  • suit someone down to the ground

    • Be extremely convenient or appropriate for someone.

      〈英,非正式〉对…方便(或合适),合…的意

      the job would have suited you down to the ground
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Tomorrow's longer distance should suit him down to the ground.
      • The situation on Saturday suited me down to the ground.
      • It was one of those nights when everything went right for United, from the saturated pitch that suited them down to the ground, to the crowd of just 41,000 rattling around in a stadium that could hold more than twice that.
      • I've got three kids so it suits me down to the ground and I can't wait to have two weeks off with them.
      • We get lots of rail travellers and commuters coming into the shop, so our location suits us down to the ground.
      • I've never even bought a lottery ticket - the truth is I have two healthy children, a beautiful and talented wife and a job that suits me down to the ground.
      • This may have been a rather heavy dish, but it suited me down to the ground.
      • It may be basic and have a lot of pictures, but it suits me down to the ground.
      • He had moved there from California in 1984 and life in the sunny principality suited him down to the ground.
      • To Jules Simoneau in the fall of 1883 he wrote: ‘I have no wish that is not fulfilled [here]; a beautiful small garden; a fine view of plain, sea and mountain; a wife that suits me down to the ground; and a barrel of good Beaujolais.’

Origin

Middle English: from Anglo-Norman French siwte, from a feminine past participle of a Romance verb based on Latin sequi 'follow'. Early senses included 'attendance at a court' and 'legal process'; sense 1 of the noun and sense 2 of the noun derive from an earlier meaning 'set of things to be used together'. The verb sense 'make appropriate' dates from the late 16th century.

Rhymes

acute, argute, astute, beaut, Beirut, boot, bruit, brut, brute, Bute, butte, Canute, cheroot, chute, commute, compute, confute, coot, cute, depute, dilute, dispute, flute, galoot, hoot, impute, jute, loot, lute, minute, moot, newt, outshoot, permute, pollute, pursuit, recruit, refute, repute, route, salute, Salyut, scoot, shoot, Shute, sloot, snoot, subacute, telecommute, Tonton Macoute, toot, transmute, undershoot, uproot, Ute, volute

Definition of suit in US English:

suit

nounso͞otsut
  • 1A set of outer clothes made of the same fabric and designed to be worn together, typically consisting of a jacket and trousers or a jacket and skirt.

    一套衣服(通常由上衣和裤子或上衣和裙子组成)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Her skirt suits were versatile enough for the office and other social occasions.
    • For that distinct, chic western look, the outlet has a complete range of suits and jackets made of imported fabric from Italy and Japan.
    • City smart looks include neat fit suits, pencil skirts, mini skirts, sleek trousers and fine knitwear.
    • The trench coat is a great jacket for workdays, to wear over suits or even sport jackets.
    • Sporty looks were attractive, too, in cafe au lait and dark brown leather shorts outfits with turned-up sleeves on the blouses, or skirt suits.
    • Cerruti has veered away from innocuous and terribly predictable suits; away from trousers, jacket, belt and shoes in perfect harmony.
    • The firm makes fabrics for men's suits and women's tailored garments.
    • But then, many in those days wore three-piece suits and the vest effectively hid the bottom of the tie.
    • In an effort to boost pride in York, it was agreed cabbies should wear smart suits, tailored trousers and black dress shoes in winter.
    • He probably also designs those fantastically expensive suits and clothes as well, doodling them down on the backs of team sheets during langours in play.
    • The man in the pinstriped suit and bowler hat is tapping his silver-topped cane on the breakfast table to emphasise each key point of his masterplan for the future well-being of the nation.
    • He has a great selection of fabrics, and can design suits in the standard English and American styles, as well as adjust for current trends and your taste.
    • His dress sense too is said to be impeccable, but conservative: wearing well-cut classic suits, and plain shirts.
    • My question is, what is the proper shirt-and-tie combo to wear with a pinstriped suit?
    • In cities, men wear lightweight suits or shirts and trousers that suit Venezuela's climate.
    • I tried on new tops, pants, jeans, suits, and jackets and made my selection.
    • Ideally, you should avoid wearing fully lined suits and jackets on hot summer days.
    • Choose jackets, tailored suits and shirtwaist dresses with straight, classic cuts.
    • That is how sportswear manufacturers describe their latest suits designed to help Olympic competitors fight the summer heat in Athens.
    • Two men rose from among the audience, one young, in a khaki suit with short trousers, the other older, with a white shirt.
    Synonyms
    outfit, set of clothes, costume, ensemble
    1. 1.1 A set of clothes to be worn on a particular occasion or for a particular activity.
      (在特殊场合或为特殊活动穿的)一套衣服
      a jogging suit

      慢跑运动服。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Firefighters again donned protective suits and collected the powder for forensic examination.
      • He attempted to enter the ship by the funnel but nearly went up in a puff of smoke due to the non fire retardant Santa suit.
      • All of it looked familiar - except the shiny, glow-in-the-dark running suits designed by Emilio Sosa.
      • Don't use a powerlifting suit or shirt; special clothing will make you depend more on momentum than on muscle.
      • If you are still clinging to polyester ski pants and an old knit, long sleeved, bike jersey as your race suit, consider Lycra.
      • He was the man in the fire-red jogging suit and the wild processed hair inspired by James Brown.
      • The wearing of the jogging suit by the non-jogging public, I contend, is the heralding of the downfall of American society.
      • He had a spotty complexion and wore a striped T-shirt and blue Reebok track suit.
      • Being cold is no fun, so pack the right diving suit and be damned, but remember that your head is the area of greatest heat loss.
      • He explained that the chemical suits would also be employed in the event of a chemical spill or other incident involving hazardous materials.
      • Today, he clings to memories and a photograph of his dad donning his green flight suit.
      • They watched these two men, and as soon as the bird flew from the nest they began to crawl forward in their gilly suits.
      • Sailors dash around in fearnought firefighting suits.
      • But staff refused to let him back even though he was dressed smartly in his club suit after helping his team beat Mansfield 4-1 on penalties.
      • A two-man recompression chamber was provided, as was a protective suit which would be worn by a sailor called to inspect and destroy unexploded ordnance.
      • Here two of the more junior sailors donned their dive suits and swam 500m out to the team's rigid inflatable boat, which was moored off the beach each night.
      • Diving history is illustrated through several odd contraptions, from early submersion suits like the one pictured to modern, state-of-the art technology.
      • Shane gets in to the swing of things by donning a convincing cowboy suit during his performance.
      • Dangerous contaminants at the crash site required the team members to wear full rubber protective suits for their safety.
      • Even Russian men, whose clothing choice was once limited to polyester business suits or polyester jogging suits, have become fussy dressers.
      Synonyms
      outfit, clothes, costume, ensemble, clothing, dress, attire, garments, garb, turnout, rig, uniform, livery, array, regalia, robes, finery
    2. 1.2 A complete set of pieces of armor for covering the whole body.
      一副盔甲
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The Grand Vestibule is hung with suits of armour and displays of old weaponry.
      • At the Seattle Art Museum he is presenting six sculptures, including a suit of armor made from hundreds of dog tags.
      • It's a constant battle with the management - you need a suit of armour, not overalls, to come to work.
      • She was raised in a castle, where Augustus John once famously found her father reading The Times in a suit of armour.
      • Many brave knights died while trying to kill the huge beast, the legend goes - until one day, a local hero named Peter took on the worm while wearing a suit of armour covered with razor blades.
      • Clad in a suit of white armor and flying her own standard she liberated France from the English at the battle of Orleans.
      • One of the first things Rosemary does before opening her farm shop in the village of Camembert is don a suit of armour - one forged in her imagination.
      • It's made from very elaborate moulds out of very thin latex, and once everything is on it's kind of like a suit of armour.
      • He emerged a moment later carrying the unassembled pieces of a suit of armor a golden bronze in color.
      • Just what Anakin's decision is, why he makes it and how it leads him to don a suit of black armour have been the stuff of Star Wars legend.
      • One of the waza chefs turns his pots and pans into a suit of armour and marches on the newly constructed religious site, with humour his only weapon.
      • ‘They saw us,’ he panted as he quickly toppled a suit of armor and wedged it up against the bottom of the door.
      • Research in the Metropolitan Museum of Art turned up a screw of the 1480s attaching parts of a suit of armor.
      • Businesses are expected to adorn their premises with the flag of St George, while the figure of England's patron saint, clad in a suit of armour, will ride on horseback through the town.
      • She dragged him down the hall and they hid behind a suit of armor.
      • For some reason this sight brings to mind a snooker ball balanced on a suit of armour.
      • This protects the body of the animal like a suit of armour.
      • ‘I went to him to buy a suit of armour and ended up persuading him to take part as well,’ said John.
      • If you, like Colthirst, find yourself donning a suit of armor at work, then your workplace has become a battlefield.
      • The shell of a mollusc isn't a suit of armour like that worn by crustaceans such as the crab.
      • It was like one of those Monty Python sketches where a man in a suit of armour walks in and slaps everyone with a rubber chicken.
    3. 1.3usually suitsinformal An executive in a business or organization, typically one regarded as exercising influence in an impersonal way.
      〈非正式〉(企业或机构中的)高级管理人员
      maybe now the suits in Washington will listen

      也许现在华盛顿的那些高级行政长官们会听一听了。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • And what about the endless fulminating about how those arch-conservative suits in the music business are shutting down anti-war thought?
      • The issue wouldn't have entered the public domain were it not for the suits within these organisations discussing these proposals over a coffee when on SPL business.
      • So we cobble something together, the suits smile sweetly, the auditors tick their boxes, and everyone is happy, including the bad guys.
      • It's not all about suits, lawyers and accountants - it's about rock 'n' roll and creativity.
      • And voters identify with actors and musicians much more than with the suits who run the record and movie industries.
      • I saw some London executive, up in Edinburgh for a meeting with the suits at Scottish Widows or wherever.
      • The ever-present green-and white clad gaggle of fans surround the main entrance to Celtic Park, all of them gazing with intent at the procession of suits and tracksuits inside.
      • Now, armed with the SEC's decision that the accounting dodge had a material impact for investors, those suits may require a bigger payout to go away.
      • The Union's new boss has overhauled the suits in Murrayfield such that there are new heads of department occupying just about every office going, from marketing to media via finance.
      • When music is free (in both senses) record companies, suits, agents, will be redundant.
      • Yet striking the right balance between the artists and the suits remains remarkably hard.
      • Now we have a procession of suits and ‘yes’ men.
      • Despite Chimpzilla's recent string of victories over Intel, the steady stream of senior suits jumping ship must give cause for concern.
      • The train is the commuter service from Waterloo, and as such, packed with suits escaping their city jobs for something semi-detached in Hampshire.
      • I flew through the hallway quickly, getting rid of the suits in the process.
      • Kahane wants nothing to do with the studio suit who has spurned him for so long, and storms out.
      • You, on the other hand, are a nobody, a bureaucrat, a stuffed suit.
      Synonyms
      businessman, businesswoman, business person, executive, bureaucrat, administrator, manager, director
  • 2Any of the sets distinguished by their pictorial symbols into which a deck of playing cards is divided, in conventional decks comprising spades, hearts, diamonds, and clubs.

    (一副牌中的)所有花色相同的一组牌

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It is generally easiest to divide a deck by suits, and then give each player all the cards of one suit.
    • Therefore the ace of diamonds is the lowest card of its suit when diamonds are not trumps.
    • The suits for this purpose are ranked Spades, Hearts, Clubs, Diamonds
    • Samba is a variation in which it is possible to meld cards in sequence in a suit as well as sets of equal cards.
    • There is no ranking between the suits - so for example the king of hearts and the king of spades are equal.
    • A ‘straight’ is five cards in consecutive order, any combination of suits.
    • If another card is led, it can be played instead of playing one of your other cards of the same suit.
    • The game also rewards your persistence by giving you a new map after beating the diamond suits.
    • The other players must all play spades if they can, but players 2 and 3 have no spades and so are allowed to play other suits.
    • On the other hand, if it was a group, you would not need to specify the suits represented by the jokers.
    • The cards are divided into three suits of twelve cards each.
    • These have since been further developed to the four symbols of magical elements, to also be seen on Tarot packs as the four suits.
    • The classic order of suits is hearts above diamonds, and spades above clubs.
    • To a three-card set with two jokers you could add any two of the three missing suits, releasing one of the jokers and forming a closed four-card set.
    • If you play this variation, you can sometimes use a joker profitably to lengthen one of your suits.
    • Tiles in a set of Chinese dominoes are divided into two suits (Civil and Military).
    • The Hanafunda deck consisted of 48 cards divided in 12 different suits, one for each month of the year.
    • The 56 Minor Arcana cards are divided into four suits, much like traditional playing cards.
    • All remaining cards from the other two suits are taken out of play.
    • Like cards, piecepack components are divided into suits: Suns, Moons, Arms, and Crowns.
  • 3

    short for lawsuit
    Example sentencesExamples
    • They are blanketing hundreds of small and large Web sites with lawsuits, threats of suits and demands for licensing payments.
    • Lawsuits in particular class-action legal suits, can provide some redress.
    • Of course, there is always the sanction of prosecutions or civil suits, and those must always remain the primary sanction for any breach of the criminal or civil law.
    • The Amendment only withholds federal judicial power in suits against the state by citizens of another state, or by citizens or subjects of any foreign state.
    • Thus the position now acknowledged is that in an appropriate case a claimant in a negligence suit may establish a prima facie case by relying on the fact of the accident.
    • Such clauses need not prevent the prosecution of meritorious suits.
    • This focuses attention on what in my view is the single important difference between judicial review and civil suit, the differing time limits.
    • There is no reason to fear a flood of negligence suits against barristers.
    • It is in the interests of public policy to discourage suits and encourage settlements.
    • It is because such acts or omissions affect the public at large that they are punishable as offences at common law and are actionable at the suit of the Attorney-General on behalf of the public.
    • Shareholder suits are designed to be a final, desperation remedy, not a knee-jerk reaction.
    • The main reason is that only the better off may be able to afford to move into separate accommodation and wait for two years before reaching a property settlement in the divorce suit.
    • Comparatively few litigants bring suits, or defend them, at their own expense.
    • If a plaintiff wins his suit in public nuisance, he can receive both money damages and injunctive relief.
    • Ads designed to assemble litigants for class action suits represent an explosive area of growth in legal advertising.
    • Plaintiffs' lawyers often turn instead to personal injury suits.
    • Since society has a minimal concern with the outcome of such private suits, plaintiff's burden of proof is a mere preponderance of the evidence.
    • The rule would require every malpractice suit to have a certificate of merit.
    • However, some of the proposals on the table go far beyond establishing the procedures that govern tort suits brought in federal court.
    • Now, wives routinely join their husbands' personal injury suits to assert their own claims.
    Synonyms
    legal action, lawsuit, suit at law, case, court case, action, cause, legal proceeding, legal process, proceedings, judicial proceedings, litigation, trial, legal contest, legal dispute, bringing to book, bringing of charges, indictment, prosecution
  • 4The process of trying to win a woman's affection with a view to marriage.

    追求(常指求婚)

    he could not compete with John's charms in Marian's eyes and his suit came to nothing

    在玛丽安的眼中,他不能匹敌约翰的魅力,所以他的求婚毫无结果。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • He took the rejection of his suit to the princess hard, and has plotted revenge against those caused the rejection of his suit.
    • The knight undertakes a love suit to the daughter of Selestinus, a wise emperor in Rome, and certain strange terms are agreed upon between them as the condition of her favor.
    Synonyms
    courtship, wooing, courting, addresses, attentions, homage, pursuit
    1. 4.1literary A petition or entreaty made to a person in authority.
      〈诗/文〉(向当权者提出的)请愿;请求
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The first concerns his suit to the Queen for the return of Waltham Forest, the second his suit to the Queen for a licence to bring certain commodities into the realm, and the third a petition brought by one Thomas Gurley against Oxford's wife.
      • The ambassador for Poland is returning from Rome having made suit to the Pope for 20,000 crowns.
      Synonyms
      entreaty, supplication, plea, prayer, appeal, request, application, invocation
  • 5A complete set of sails required for a ship or for a set of spars.

    一套篷帆

    Example sentencesExamples
    • A new vessel would always be provided with at least two suits of sails from the sail-making firm engaged by the owner.
    • So, even in this computer-age, the ultimate proving ground of a new suit of sails remains the race course, the way it should be.
verbso͞otsut
  • 1with object Be convenient for or acceptable to.

    适合,适宜于

    no object the apartment has two bedrooms—if it suits, you can have one of them

    这套房子有两间卧室,如果合你的意,你可以住一间。

    he lied whenever it suited him

    只要对他有利他就撒谎。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Their personalities were ideally suited to the task at hand.
    • Maria Callas needs no promotion, yet her distinctively fiery, passionate style was not equally suited to every role.
    • The small flat that he kept in Horsham perfectly suited her needs.
    • The athletes should be able to come to these grounds and practise whenever it suits them.
    • While it is true that prices are formed from the subjective valuations of the economic actors, we cannot suspend the laws of supply and demand whenever it suits our goals.
    • However, the obsessive-compulsive actress is not well suited to the task.
    • They play their cards in a completely random fashion, laying down and picking up whenever it suits them.
    • We don't like it when politicians change their minds or try to reinterpret previous actions or statements according to what suits the current social climate.
    • An income protection policy may suit his needs far better.
    • When it comes to mortgages, the mainstream banks have been relatively slow to adjust their acceptance criteria to suit this new environment.
    • Coherent rubber compositions obtained by the method are well suited for use as play surfaces or sports surfaces.
    • The companies offering cards, on the other hand, get to adjust their medication prices whenever it suits them.
    • At the same time, I feel that the bowling attack of the hosts is more suited to Test matches than one-dayers.
    • Burton's characteristic gothic style is perfectly suited to this retelling of an old Russian folk tale.
    • Its courses are available on computers connected to the internet, so workers can learn wherever and whenever it suits them and you.
    • Architects will be looking for surfacing which suits the town square feel, and the boulevard of upswept maple trees planned for the east side of the High Street.
    • But in their own ways all are equally impressive, and anyone wanting to build a cantata collection can confidently mix and match as it suits them.
    • The M74 is just half a mile from the property, which is probably a bit too close for convenience, although it may suit those commuting to Edinburgh or Glasgow - both of which are about an hour's drive away.
    • Choose the fabric and finish that best suits your purpose and budget.
    • And yet most people don't have a credit card that ideally suits their needs.
    Synonyms
    be convenient for, be acceptable to, be suitable for, meet the requirements of, satisfy the demands of, be in line with the wishes of
    make appropriate for, make appropriate to, make fitting for, make fitting to, tailor, fashion, accommodate, adjust, adapt, modify, fit, gear, equip, design
    1. 1.1suit oneselfoften in imperative Act entirely according to one's own wishes (often used to express the speaker's annoyance)
      完全随自己的意愿行事(常用于表达说话者的不满)
      “I'm not going to help you.” “Suit yourself.”

      “我不会帮你的。”“随你的便吧。”

      Example sentencesExamples
      • And then of course the series gets cancelled or new designers decide they don't like the old story and change everything to suit themselves, resulting in an incomprehensible mess.
      • The tribunal heard that up to 60 per cent of staff at North College had been against the merger, and it was claimed many had acted unprofessionally by being uncooperative and even altering timetables to suit themselves.
      • Departments suited themselves about typefaces and headings.
      • They are private clubs and can to a large extent suit themselves.
      • I don't think so, for the Government doesn't back date anything unless it suits themselves.
      • The module based system of learning allows learners to take courses at times to suit themselves and take time out if they need to.
      • Smaller drivers can also adjust their seats to 14 different positions to suit themselves.
      • Everybody else can suit themselves but this is my democratic choice.
      • Let those who want to study Shakespeare suit themselves.
      • But history will be kind to him mainly because the victors write the history and they write it to suit themselves.
      • And just those who argued over Luther, those who want to use Columba for their own arguments pick and choose the bits of the truth which most suit themselves.
      • Carve the bird to suit yourself; I like to do it in the roasting tin.
      • In a word, they were doing what every elite in unaccountable institutions do, doing what suited themselves.
      • You see this desperation in the way they respond to our every little action and in the way they twist our words to suit themselves.
      • Obey the law or take the rap - you can't pick and choose to suit yourself.
      • Yet I suppose Inuit have always modified Christianity to suit themselves, a traditional cosmology with the formal overlay of religion.
      • Again despite all the huffing and puffing, despite Cork's famous facility for interpreting the rule-book to suit themselves, that was wrong too.
      • It appears in your letter, you are manipulating God's word to suit yourself.
      • You also have a knack for inventing new words to suit yourself.
      • We don't have big healthy meals but instead the trend is for lots of baby dishes, which is billed as ‘tasting’ or ‘grazing’ menus, which allow customers to mix, pick, share and generally suit themselves.
    2. 1.2suit something toarchaic Adapt or make appropriate for (something)
      〈古〉使适合(某事物)
      they took care to suit their answers to the questions put to them

      他们小心地回答,以便使答案和对他们提出的问题相符合。

  • 2Go well with or enhance the features, figure, or character of (someone)

    适合(某人)

    the dress didn't suit her

    那件连衣裙不适合她穿。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • For evening, the abundance of choices here means that there is a dress style to suit every woman.
    • One friend told reporters yesterday the designer was delighted with how well the dress suits his client.
    • Get to know your own features and see what suits you as an individual.
    • It takes little attention to a child's psyche and character to know what suits him or her best.
    • He had on a navy blue suit that really suited him, with a plain red tie knotted round his neck.
    • In a recent interview, he had admitted that he had become choosy and was going in for roles that suited his personality.
    • Never mind the idea that blue and green should never be seen: red and blue just do not suit you.
    • The brown leather jacket and blue jeans suited him well, outlining and enhancing his figure.
    • Some guy at work yesterday said that blue really suited me.
    • The gown, in pure white satin, had only some small delicate decorations on the front that suited her slim figure perfectly.
    • This year, Kirtilal Kalidas have come out with a range of ornaments styled to suit people of all ages.
    • Each voice suits the character's personality well.
    • I had purple hair for a while, but blue suits me better.
    • Flatter your figure with a wedding dress that suits you.
    • Make at least one appointment with the bridal room of a big store and enjoy finding the style of dress which suits you best, with the help of expert staff.
    • Robert is a very animated character, so Opera suits him for sure.
    • Furthermore, the traditional unpredictability of the Monaco Grand Prix is a characteristic which suits the maverick team from Silverstone and offers the hope of a better result.
    • She looked in the full length mirror that hung on the wall, and smiled; the dress suited her quite well.
    • The brilliant Autumn / Winter collection features colours, styles and prices to suit every woman.
    • Stay fit, dress to suit our figure, get a flattering hairstyle, and enhance nature with the right touch of makeup.
    Synonyms
    look attractive on, enhance the appearance of, look right on, look good on, become, flatter, show to advantage, set off, enhance, ornament, grace
  • 3North American no object Put on clothes, especially for a particular activity.

    〈北美〉(尤指为特定的活动)穿衣

    I suited up and entered the water

    我穿上游泳衣,下了水。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • When the red phone rings the crew have 90 seconds to get suited up and get the boat out on the water.
    • But when Aces did not ice a team this year, he suited up with the Mohawks.
    • We suited up and trooped into this small white-tiled room.
    • In the billboard ad, yoga class attendees adopted meditative positions suited up in the spa's yellow gym suits.
    • We got suited up with our life jackets, helmets and sprayskirts, and then put our kayaks in the water.
    • Any work done while suited up, such as lifting equipment, makes you sweat more.
    • After a thorough brief, we suited up and began walking up to the flight deck.
    • It comes with a lush terrycloth towel that attaches to Velcro on the inside of the mat, making for a soft place to stand and get suited up.
    • I suited up, donning the most complex all-weather gear imaginable to man.
    • Although Detroit had nothing left to play for, everyone on the team suited up and played at playoff speed.
    • So I got my youngest brother Sam suited up and grabbed my two cameras and shot over there.
    • On the Swarthmore side of the field, there were more kids suited up than there were fans in the bleachers.
    • At 7,000 feet we finished suiting up and sat in their laps so we could get attached to their rigs.
    • I confidently unloaded the bike, suited up, and swung my leg over the bike to get rolling.
    • We suited up and told the captain we were standing by to pull the helicopter out of the hangar for launch.
    • And I think one of the things that has become very apparent is, we suited up for the war, but we didn't really suit up for the peace adequately.
    • I've suited up like that twice a week all summer down here and have lost about 10 pounds.
    • He suited up during workouts and often invaded the clubhouse before and after games.
    • Pellegrino begins to suit up; he'll do a drift dive, letting the current pull him along as he examines the hull.
    • Neely, of course, was born in Comox and suited up for the Vancouver Canucks for three seasons starting in 1983.

Phrases

  • suit the action to the word

    • Carry out one's stated intentions.

      说到做到

      he backed away, fearing she might suit the action to the word
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Let your own discretion be your tutor; suit the action to the word, the word to the action.
      • Mary said no, but she would go and ask me; and, suiting the action to the word, she left them standing on the doorstep and, knocking at my bedroom door, asked me when I should be in.
      • He does, however, quote the passage from Hamlet on suiting the action to the word and comments: ‘The actors were not to identify with character.’
      • And, suiting his action to his words, the president visited each political party's station at the IEC, followed by a large media contingent and a bundle of bodyguards.
      • As Sam said this, he suited the action to the word, and whistled far louder.
      • Once achieved, such a profile makes it possible to ‘suit the action to the word and the word to the action’, as Hamlet told the players.
  • suit someone down to the ground

    • Be extremely convenient or appropriate for someone.

      〈英,非正式〉对…方便(或合适),合…的意

      the job would have suited you down to the ground
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The situation on Saturday suited me down to the ground.
      • He had moved there from California in 1984 and life in the sunny principality suited him down to the ground.
      • It was one of those nights when everything went right for United, from the saturated pitch that suited them down to the ground, to the crowd of just 41,000 rattling around in a stadium that could hold more than twice that.
      • We get lots of rail travellers and commuters coming into the shop, so our location suits us down to the ground.
      • It may be basic and have a lot of pictures, but it suits me down to the ground.
      • This may have been a rather heavy dish, but it suited me down to the ground.
      • I've never even bought a lottery ticket - the truth is I have two healthy children, a beautiful and talented wife and a job that suits me down to the ground.
      • To Jules Simoneau in the fall of 1883 he wrote: ‘I have no wish that is not fulfilled [here]; a beautiful small garden; a fine view of plain, sea and mountain; a wife that suits me down to the ground; and a barrel of good Beaujolais.’
      • I've got three kids so it suits me down to the ground and I can't wait to have two weeks off with them.
      • Tomorrow's longer distance should suit him down to the ground.

Origin

Middle English: from Anglo-Norman French siwte, from a feminine past participle of a Romance verb based on Latin sequi ‘follow’. Early senses included ‘attendance at a court’ and ‘legal process’; suit (sense 1 of the noun and suit sense 2 of the noun) derive from an earlier meaning ‘set of things to be used together’. The verb sense ‘make appropriate’ dates from the late 16th century.

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