'Suit' can be used as either a noun e.g. "He had an Armani suit on" or as a verb e.g. "This dress will suit her well".
All the cards were of the same suit.
I put on the suit for the wedding.
Suited
Example:
The chef suited in white. (wearing white work attire)
The white uniform suited for the job.
suitcase, suitable
Suits is the plural of suit.
Spotless could replace impeccable in that sentence.
-suit This is because your prefix is un- and your suffix is -able so your base word must be suit. :)
Well, tailor means someone who makes or alters clothes so here's an example. 'Jack, the local tailor, fitted my smart, blue suit for me.'
Yes, the word 'suit' is both a verb (suit, suits, suiting, suited) and a noun (suit, suits). Examples: Verb: The accommodations suit me very well. Noun: I'll need a new suit for the occasion.
Yes, the noun 'suit' is a common noun, a word for any suit of any kind.
The adjective in this sentence is police. The word police describes what kind of suit it was.
Put on your new suit and let's go. Dinner and a movie will suit me just fine.
there was a suit inside he court or my father has a very expensive suit. hope this helped you...made by nicole :)
Any holes in your wet suit can be fixed using commercial wet suit cement.
The grey suit looks great on display.
To be dapper is to be trim and nimble. An example sentence would be: He looked very dapper in his new suit.
The suit made the wearer immune to biochemical attacks.
Don't allow the salesperson to impose a style that doesn't suit you.
"Iron Man flew impossibly high with the help of his suit."
She was dressed in a conservative suit. That politician has a conservative outlook.
The tailor decided to sew the pocket flaps on the suit in the morning.
No, it doesn't suit me to do that.