No, it doesn't suit me to do that.
Put on your new suit and let's go. Dinner and a movie will suit me just fine.
Early weekday evenings or Sunday afternoons suit most people.
When his wife told him she was pregnant he was nervous about the prospect of fatherhood. He loved the baby and fatherhood seemed to suit him.
The adjective in this sentence is police. The word police describes what kind of suit it was.
To correct the unclear reference, you must reword the sentence. The sentence isn't clear that the pronoun 'it' refers to the suit or the car. Reworded: Take the suit to be cleaned when you take out the car. Put the suit in the car and take the car to be cleaned.
there was a suit inside he court or my father has a very expensive suit. hope this helped you...made by nicole :)
Tony's Iron Man suit stood out out in stark contrast against the muted blues and greens of the uniformed soldiers around him.
The faulty reference in the sentence can be corrected by clarifying what "it" refers to. A suitable rewrite would be: "Take the suit from the car and have the suit cleaned." This eliminates ambiguity and makes it clear that "the suit" is the item to be cleaned.
I visited the tailor to be measured for a suit.
We went to the lake for swimming, not for swim suit modeling.
"when" is a subordinating conjunction in this sentence, as it introduces a dependent clause ("he wears a suit") that cannot stand alone as a complete sentence.
can you give me as sentence for channel