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follow suit

 - 7 dictionary results

suit

[soot] ,
–noun
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.
a. one of the four sets or classes (spades, hearts, diamonds, and clubs) into which a common deck of playing cards is divided.
b. the aggregate of cards belonging to one of these sets held in a player's hand at one time: Spades were his long suit.
c. one of various sets or classes into which less common decks of cards are divided, as lances, hammers, etc., found in certain decks formerly used or used in fortune telling.
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.
–verb (used with object)
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.
–verb (used without object)
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,
a. Cards. to play a card of the same suit as that led.
b. to follow the example of another: The girl jumped over the fence, and her playmates followed suit.

Origin:
1250–1300; ME siute, sute, suite (n.) < AF, OF, akin to sivre to follow. See sue, suite


suitlike, adjective
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
Cite This Source Link To follow suit
fol·low   (fŏl'ō)   
v.   fol·lowed, fol·low·ing, fol·lows

v.   tr.
  1. To come or go after; proceed behind: Follow the usher to your seat.

    1. To go after in or as if in pursuit: "The wrong she had done followed her and haunted her dream" (Katherine Anne Porter).

    2. To keep under surveillance: followed the suspect around town.

    3. To move along the course of; take: We followed a path to the shore.

    4. To go in the direction of; be guided by: followed the sun westward across the plains; followed the signs to the zoo.

    5. To act in agreement or compliance with; obey: follow the rules; follow one's instincts.

    6. To keep to or stick to: followed the recipe; follow a diet.

    7. To watch or observe closely: followed the bird through binoculars.

    8. To be attentive to; pay close heed to: too sleepy to follow the sermon.

    9. To keep oneself informed of the course, progress, or fortunes of: follow the stock market; followed the local teams.

    1. To move along the course of; take: We followed a path to the shore.

    2. To go in the direction of; be guided by: followed the sun westward across the plains; followed the signs to the zoo.

    3. To act in agreement or compliance with; obey: follow the rules; follow one's instincts.

    4. To keep to or stick to: followed the recipe; follow a diet.

    5. To watch or observe closely: followed the bird through binoculars.

    6. To be attentive to; pay close heed to: too sleepy to follow the sermon.

    7. To keep oneself informed of the course, progress, or fortunes of: follow the stock market; followed the local teams.

  2. To accept the guidance, command, or leadership of: follow a spiritual master; rebels who refused to follow their commander.

  3. To adhere to; practice: followed family traditions.

  4. To take as a model or precedent; imitate: followed my example and resigned.

    1. To act in agreement or compliance with; obey: follow the rules; follow one's instincts.

    2. To keep to or stick to: followed the recipe; follow a diet.

    3. To watch or observe closely: followed the bird through binoculars.

    4. To be attentive to; pay close heed to: too sleepy to follow the sermon.

    5. To keep oneself informed of the course, progress, or fortunes of: follow the stock market; followed the local teams.

  5. To engage in (a trade or occupation); work at.

  6. To come after in order, time, or position: Night follows day.

  7. To bring something about at a later time than or as a consequence of: She followed her lecture with a question-and-answer period. The band followed its hit record with a tour.

  8. To occur or be evident as a consequence of: Your conclusion does not follow your premise.

    1. To watch or observe closely: followed the bird through binoculars.

    2. To be attentive to; pay close heed to: too sleepy to follow the sermon.

    3. To keep oneself informed of the course, progress, or fortunes of: follow the stock market; followed the local teams.

  9. To grasp the meaning or logic of; understand: Do you follow my argument?

v.   intr.
  1. To come, move, or take place after another person or thing in order or time.

  2. To occur or be evident as a consequence; result: If you ignore your diet, trouble will follow.

  3. To grasp the meaning or reasoning of something; understand.

n.  
  1. The act or an instance of following.

  2. Games A billiards shot in which the cue ball is struck above center so that it follows the path of the object ball after impact.

  3. Sports To carry a stroke to natural completion after hitting or releasing a ball or other object.

  4. To carry an act, project, or intention to completion; pursue fully: followed through on her promise to reorganize the department.

  5. To carry to completion; follow through on: followed up their recommendations with concrete proposals.

  6. To increase the effectiveness or enhance the success of by further action: followed up her interview with an e-mail.

Phrasal Verb(s):
follow alongTo move or proceed in unison or in accord with an example: followed along with the song.
follow through
  1. Sports To carry a stroke to natural completion after hitting or releasing a ball or other object.

  2. To carry an act, project, or intention to completion; pursue fully: followed through on her promise to reorganize the department.

follow up
  1. To carry to completion; follow through on: followed up their recommendations with concrete proposals.

  2. To increase the effectiveness or enhance the success of by further action: followed up her interview with an e-mail.


Idiom(s):
as followsAs will be stated next. Used to introduce a specified enumeration, explanation, or command.

Idiom(s):
follow (one's) nose
  1. To move straight ahead or in a direct path.

  2. Informal To be guided by instinct: had no formal training but became a success by following his nose.


Idiom(s):
follow suit
  1. Games To play a card of the same suit as the one led.

  2. To do as another has done; follow an example.


[Middle English folowen, from Old English folgian.]
Synonyms: These verbs mean to come after something or someone. Follow, which has the widest application, can refer to coming after in time or order, as a consequence or result, or by the operation of logic: Night follows day. He disregarded doctor's orders, and a relapse followed. Because she decries violence, it follows that she won't carry a gun. To succeed is to come next after another, especially in planned order determined by considerations such as rank, inheritance, or election: The heir apparent succeeded to the throne.
Ensue usually applies to what is a consequence or logical development: After the government was toppled, chaos ensued.
Result implies that what follows is caused by what has preceded: Failure to file an income tax return can result in a fine.
Supervene, in contrast, refers to something that is often unexpected and that has little relation to what has preceded: "A bad harvest supervened" (Charlotte Brontë).
Usage Note: As follows (not as follow) is the established form of the idiom regardless of whether the noun that precedes it is singular or plural: The regulations are as follows.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Slang Dictionary
suit

  1. n.
    a businessman or businesswoman; someone who is in charge. : A couple of suits checked into a working-class hotel and caused some eyebrows to raise.
Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions by Richard A. Spears.Fourth Edition.
Copyright 2007. Published by McGraw Hill.
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Word Origin & History

suit  (v.)
"be agreeable or convenient," 1578, from suit (n.), probably from the notion of "provide with a set of new clothes." Suitor "man who is courting a woman" is 1586, from earlier notion of "adherent, follower" (c.1380).
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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Legal Dictionary

Main Entry: suit
Function: noun
Etymology: Anglo-French siute suite suit request to initiate legal proceedings, literally, pursuit, from siute, feminine past participle of suire to follow, from Old French sivre —see SUE
: a proceeding to enforce a right or claim; specifically : an action brought in a court seeking a remedy for injuries suffered or a determination of rights : LAWSUIT
Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of Law, © 1996 Merriam-Webster, Inc.
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Medical Dictionary

Main Entry: suit
—see G SUIT, PRESSURESUIT
Merriam-Webster's Medical Dictionary, © 2002 Merriam-Webster, Inc.
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Idioms & Phrases

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]

The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.
Copyright © 1997. Published by Houghton Mifflin.
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