,| 1. | a set of clothing, armor, or the like, intended for wear together. |
| 2. | a set of men's garments of the same color and fabric, consisting of trousers, a jacket, and sometimes a vest. |
| 3. | a similarly matched set consisting of a skirt and jacket, and sometimes a topcoat or blouse, worn by women. |
| 4. | any costume worn for some special activity: a running suit. |
| 5. | Slang. a business executive. |
| 6. | Law. the act, the process, or an instance of suing in a court of law; legal prosecution; lawsuit. |
| 7. | Cards.
|
| 8. | suite (defs. 1–3, 5). |
| 9. | the wooing or courting of a woman: She rejected his suit. |
| 10. | the act of making a petition or an appeal. |
| 11. | a petition, as to a person of rank or station. |
| 12. | Also called set. Nautical. a complete group of sails for a boat. |
| 13. | one of the seven classes into which a standard set of 28 dominoes may be divided by matching the numbers on half the face of each: a three suit contains the 3-blank, 3-1, 3-2, 3-3, 3-4, 3-5, and 3-6. Since each such suit contains one of each of the other possible suits, only one complete suit is available per game. |
| 14. | to make appropriate, adapt, or accommodate, as one thing to another: to suit the punishment to the crime. |
| 15. | to be appropriate or becoming to: Blue suits you very well. |
| 16. | to be or prove satisfactory, agreeable, or acceptable to; satisfy or please: The arrangements suit me. |
| 17. | to provide with a suit, as of clothing or armor; clothe; array. |
| 18. | to be appropriate or suitable; accord. |
| 19. | to be satisfactory, agreeable, or acceptable. |
| 20. | suit up, to dress in a uniform or special suit. |
| 21. | follow suit,
|
suit
|
follow suit
Imitate or do as someone else has done, as in Bill decided to leave for the rest of the day, and Mary followed suit. This term comes from card games in which one must play a card from the same suit as the one led. [Mid-1800s]