The word suffice means to do, or be sufficient. One example of this word in a sentence would be "You will suffice in the position I am looking to fill, so suffice to say you are hired".
I hope these nails will suffice to hold the frame together.
Suffice it to say that Suffice is the verb form of Sufficient.
Logic tells me it is not correct since "suffice" is a synonym of sufficient. You would never say "sufficient it to say" would you. So why say "suffice it to say"?
another word for the word suffice is- be enough
Suffice it to say that Suffice is the verb form of Sufficient.
I am not that thirsty, one glass of water will suffice.
When a quick approximate answer will suffice.
Go here: http://thesaurus.reference.com/browse/suffice?qsrc=2889
"A few dollars will suffice, I only need some change."
You can use "suffice" in a sentence like this: "A simple explanation will suffice for now, as we can discuss the details later." This shows that the basic explanation is adequate for the time being. Another example could be, "If you bring a jacket, that should suffice for the chilly evening."
The sentence "we hope that it would suffice to all your requirements" contains a subject-verb agreement error. The pronoun "it" does not agree in number with the plural noun "requirements." To correct this, the sentence should be revised to say "we hope that it would suffice for all your requirements" or "we hope that they would suffice to meet all your requirements."
"Would an answer as simple as this suffice?"