adjective, fit⋅ter, fit⋅test, verb, fit⋅ted or fit, fit⋅ting, noun | 1. | adapted or suited; appropriate: This water isn't fit for drinking. A long-necked giraffe is fit for browsing treetops. |
| 2. | proper or becoming: fit behavior. |
| 3. | qualified or competent, as for an office or function: a fit candidate. |
| 4. | prepared or ready: crops fit for gathering. |
| 5. | in good physical condition; in good health: He's fit for the race. |
| 6. | Biology.
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| 7. | to be adapted to or suitable for (a purpose, object, occasion, etc.). |
| 8. | to be proper or becoming for. |
| 9. | to be of the right size or shape for: The dress fitted her perfectly. |
| 10. | to adjust or make conform: to fit a ring to the finger. |
| 11. | to make qualified or competent: qualities that fit one for leadership. |
| 12. | to prepare: This school fits students for college. |
| 13. | to put with precise placement or adjustment: He fitted the picture into the frame. |
| 14. | to provide; furnish; equip: to fit a door with a new handle. |
| 15. | to be suitable or proper. |
| 16. | to be of the right size or shape, as a garment for the wearer or any object or part for a thing to which it is applied: The shoes fit. |
| 17. | the manner in which a thing fits: The fit was perfect. |
| 18. | something that fits: The coat is a poor fit. |
| 19. | the process of fitting. |
| 20. | fit out or up, to furnish with supplies, equipment, clothing, furniture, or other requisites; supply; equip: to fit out an expedition. |
| 21. | fit to be tied, Informal. extremely annoyed or angry: He was fit to be tied when I told him I'd wrecked the car. |
| 22. | fit to kill, Informal. to the limit; exceedingly: She was dressed up fit to kill. |

| 1. | a sudden, acute attack or manifestation of a disease, esp. one marked by convulsions or unconsciousness: a fit of epilepsy. |
| 2. | an onset, spell, or period of emotion, feeling, inclination, activity, etc.: a fit of anger; a fit of weeping. |
| 3. | by or in fits and starts, at irregular intervals; intermittently: This radio works by fits and starts. |
| 4. | throw a fit, to become extremely excited or angry: Your father will throw a fit when he hears what you have done. |
| Banking. Federal Insurance Tax. |
fit 1 (fĭt) v. fit·ted or fit, fit·ted, fit·ting, fits v. tr.
[Middle English fitten, to be suitable, marshal troops.] fit'ly adv., fit'ter n. |
fit
fit 1 (fĭt)
v. fit·ted or fit, fit·ted, fit·ting, fits
To be the proper size and shape. adj. fit·ter, fit·test
Physically sound; healthy. n.
The degree of precision with which surfaces are adjusted or adapted to each other in a machine, device, or collection of parts.
fit 2 (fĭt)
n.
A seizure or a convulsion, especially one caused by epilepsy.
The sudden appearance of a symptom such as coughing or sneezing.
fit
In addition to the idioms beginning with fit, also see give someone fits; have a fit; if the shoe fits; see fit to; survival of the fittest.
| FIT frequent international traveler |
fit
in literature, a division of a poem or song, a canto, or a similar division. The word, which is archaic, is of Old English date and has an exact correspondent in Old Saxon fittea, an example of which occurs in the Latin preface of the Heliand. It probably represents figurative use of a common Germanic noun referring to the unraveled edge of a fabric. Lewis Carroll revived this archaic poetic division (perhaps to lend gravity) in the composition of his 132-verse nonsense poem The Hunting of the Snark (1876), beginning with "Fit the First: The Landing" and ending with "Fit the Eighth: The Vanishing."
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