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1 suit
su:t 1. noun1) (a set of clothes usually all of the same cloth etc, made to be worn together, eg a jacket, trousers (and waistcoat) for a man, or a jacket and skirt or trousers for a woman.) dress; drakt2) (a piece of clothing for a particular purpose: a bathing-suit / diving-suit.) -drakt; -dress3) (a case in a law court: He won/lost his suit.) rettssak4) (an old word for a formal request, eg a proposal of marriage to a lady.) frieri, beiling5) (one of the four sets of playing-cards - spades, hearts, diamonds, clubs.) farge (i kortspill)2. verb1) (to satisfy the needs of, or be convenient for: The arrangements did not suit us; The climate suits me very well.) passe, tilfredsstille2) ((of clothes, styles, fashions etc) to be right or appropriate for: Long hair suits her; That dress doen't suit her.) passe til, kle3) (to adjust or make appropriate or suitable: He suited his speech to his audience.) tilpasse, innrette etter•- suited- suitor
- suitcase
- follow suit
- suit down to the ground
- suit oneselfdress--------farge--------søksmålIsubst. \/suːt\/, \/sjuːt\/1) ( sett med klær) drakt, dress2) ( jus) rettssak, prosess3) ( jus) tvistemål4) (jus, også lawsuit) søksmål, saksøking5) ( kortspill) farge6) frieri, beiling7) ( gammeldags) følgefile a suit ( jus) anlegge sak, innlede rettergangfollow suit følge farge, melde farge ( overført) følge eksempelet, gjøre det samme, følge opplong suit eller strong suit styrke, sterk side, forsemen in (dark\/grey) suits eller suits ( hverdagslig) byråkrater sjeferpress\/plead one's suit with fri til, beile tilsuit for divorce begjæring om skilsmissesuit of armour rustningsuit of mourning sørgedraktsuit of sails alle seilene en seilbåt trengersurvival suit se ➢ survivalIIverb \/suːt\/, \/sjuːt\/1) passe (for)• which day suits you best?• will tomorrow suit you?2) kle3) passe, stemme overens, stå i stil4) tilfredsstille, behage, gjøre til lags5) oppfylle6) passe inn i, passe sammen med7) ( gammeldags) beile, frisuit someone's book passe med noens planersuit someone's convenience rette seg etter noensuit the action to the word omsette ord i handlingsuit to avpasse etter, innrette etter
См. также в других словарях:
match — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 (esp. BrE) in sports ADJECTIVE ▪ boxing (BrE, AmE), chess (BrE, AmE), football (BrE), rugby (BrE), soccer (usually football match in BrE and soccer game in AmE … Collocations dictionary
match — match1 W3S3 [mætʃ] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(game)¦ 2¦(fire)¦ 3¦(colours/patterns)¦ 4¦(good opponent)¦ 5 shouting match 6¦(marriage)¦ 7¦(suitability)¦ ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Sense: 1, 3 7; Origin: Old English mAcca] [ … Dictionary of contemporary English
match — match1 /mach/, n. 1. a slender piece of wood, cardboard, or other flammable material tipped with a chemical substance that produces fire when rubbed on a rough or chemically prepared surface. 2. a wick, cord, or the like, prepared to burn at an… … Universalium
match — 1 noun 1 FIRE (C) a small wooden or paper stick, used to light a fire, cigarette etc: a box of matches | strike a match (=rub a match against a surface to produce a flame) | put a match to (=make something burn by using a match): I tore up the… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
match — I [[t]mætʃ[/t]] n. 1) cv a slender piece of wood or other flammable material tipped with a chemical substance that produces fire when rubbed on a rough or chemically prepared surface 2) cv a wick, cord, or the like, prepared to burn at an even… … From formal English to slang
match´er — match1 «mach», noun. 1. a short, slender piece of wood or pasteboard tipped with a mixture that takes fire when rubbed on a rough or specially prepared surface: »The heads of matches have, at the very tip, a chemical called phosphorus sulfide. 2 … Useful english dictionary
match — I. /mætʃ / (say mach) noun 1. a short, slender piece of wood or other material tipped with a chemical substance which produces fire when rubbed on a rough or chemically prepared surface. 2. a wick, cord, or the like, prepared to burn at an even… …
match — 01. Yuck, I don t think a checked shirt really [matches] well with polka dot pants. 02. My son never wears [matching] socks; he thinks it looks cool to wear two different ones. 03. André Agassi won the first [match] against Pete Sampras at… … Grammatical examples in English
English words with uncommon properties — For the purposes of this article, any word which has appeared in a recognised general English dictionary published in the 20th century or later is considered a candidate. For interest, some archaic words, non standard words and proper names are… … Wikipedia
go with — verb 1. be present or associated with an event or entity (Freq. 10) French fries come with the hamburger heart attacks are accompanied by distruction of heart tissue fish usually goes with white wine this kind of vein accompanies certain arteries … Useful english dictionary
1600-1650 in fashion — Fashion in the period 1600 1650 in Western European clothing is characterized by the disappearance of the ruff in favour of broad lace or linen collars. Waistlines rose through the period for both men and women. Other notable fashions included… … Wikipedia