Log in or Sign up
  1. fit love

Definitions

American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition

  1. v. To be the proper size and shape for: These shoes fit me.
  2. v. To cause to be the proper size and shape: The tailor fitted the trousers by shortening them.
  3. v. To measure for proper size: She fitted me for a new jacket.
  4. v. To be appropriate to; suit: music that fits your mood.
  5. v. To be in conformity or agreement with: observations that fit the theory nicely.
  6. v. To make suitable; adapt: fitted the shelves for large books. See Synonyms at adapt.
  7. v. To make ready; prepare: Specialized training fitted her for the job.
  8. v. To equip; outfit: fit out a ship.
  9. v. To provide a place or time for: You can't fit any more toys in the box. The doctor can fit you in today.
  10. v. To insert or adjust so as to be properly in place: fit a handle on a door.
  11. v. To be the proper size and shape.
  12. v. To be suited; belong: doesn't fit in with these people.
  13. v. To be in harmony; agree: His good mood fit in with the joyful occasion.
  14. adj. Suited, adapted, or acceptable for a given circumstance or purpose: not a fit time for flippancy.
  15. adj. Appropriate; proper: Do as you see fit.
  16. adj. Physically sound; healthy: keeps fit with diet and exercise.
  17. adj. Biology Successfully adapted to survive and produce viable offspring in a particular environment.
  18. n. The state, quality, or way of being fitted: the proper fit of means to ends.
  19. n. The manner in which clothing fits: a jacket with a tight fit.
  20. n. The degree of precision with which surfaces are adjusted or adapted to each other in a machine or collection of parts.
  21. idiom. fit to be tied Roused to great anger or indignation; outraged.
  22. idiom. fit to kill Slang To an extreme or elaborate degree: dressed up fit to kill.
  23. n. Medicine A seizure or convulsion, especially one caused by epilepsy.
  24. n. Medicine The sudden appearance of a symptom such as coughing or sneezing.
  25. n. A sudden outburst of emotion: a fit of jealousy.
  26. n. A sudden period of vigorous activity.
  27. idiom. by With irregular intervals of action and inaction; intermittently.
  28. n. Archaic A section of a poem or ballad.

Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

  1. n. A struggle; a short period of active physical exertion.
  2. n. An attack of convulsive disease; a muscular convulsion, often with loss of self-control and consciousness; spasm; specifically, an epileptic attack.
  3. n. The invasion, exacerbation, or paroxysm of disease, or of any physical disturbance, coming suddenly or by abrupt transition: as, a fit of the gout; a fit of colic, of coughing, or of sneezing; a cold or a hot fit in intermittent fever.
  4. n. A more or less sudden and transient manifestation of emotion or feeling of any kind, as of passion (anger), grief, laughter, laziness, etc.; usually, a manifestation of violent emotion; a paroxysm; a “spell.”
  5. n. A sudden impulse toward effort, activity, or motion, followed by an interval of relaxation; impulsive and intermittent action: as, he will do it now that the fit is on him; to have a fit of work. In the emission theory of light a fit is a period during which the matter of light is more or less easily transmitted. These fits were supposed by Newton to account for the phenomena now explained by the periods of undulation.
  6. n. A caprice; capricious or irregular action or movement.
  7. n. A stroke.
  8. To force or wrench, as by a fit or convulsion.
  9. Meet; suitable; befitting; becoming; conformable to a standard of right, duty, or appropriateness; proper; appropriate.
  10. Adapted to an end, object, or design; conformable to a standard of efficiency or qualification; suitable; competent.
  11. In a state of preparedness; in a suitable condition; ready; prepared: as, fit to die.
  12. Specifically, in sporting language, in condition; properly trained for action: as, the horse was not fit, and lost the race; hence, colloquially, in good health.
  13. Expedient, congruous, correspondent, convenient, apposite, adequate. Apt, Fit. See a pt.
  14. n. A fitting or adjustment; adaptation, as of one thing to another; something that fits or is fitted: as. the fit of a garment, or of the parts of a machine; the coat is an exact fit.
  15. n. A fitting out; preparation: as, a good fit for college.
  16. n. The part of a car-axle upon which the wheel is forced.
  17. n. One's equal, like. or match.
  18. n. [⟨ fit, verb] In soap-making, the liquid soap, before it is allowed to cool and harden, in the finishing stage of the manufacture of yellow soap. See fitting, n., 2.
  19. To make fit or suitable; adapt; bring into a corresponding form or a conformable condition: as, to fit a coat or gown to the figure; to fit a key to a lock; to fit the mind to one's circumstances.
  20. To accommodate with anything suitable; furnish with what is fit or appropriate as to size, shape, etc.: as, to fit one with a coat or a pair of shoes.
  21. To prepare; furnish with what is proper or necessary; equip; make ready; qualify: as, to fit a ship for a long voyage; to fit one's self for a journey; to fit a student for college.
  22. To be properly adjusted or adapted to; be suitable for as to size, form, character, qualification, etc.; suit: as, the coat exactly fits you; he fits his place well.
  23. To be proper for; be in keeping with; become; befit.
  24. Synonyms To adjust.
  25. To equip, provide.
  26. To be fit, suitable, becoming, seemly, or proper.
  27. To be properly adjusted; be adapted or made suitable.
  28. n. A song, ballad, or story; a division of a song, ballad, or story.
  29. n. A foot; a step.
  30. To kick.
  31. To tread.
  32. To kick.
  33. Great; long: as, a fit time; a fit deal of trouble.
  34. A dialectal preterit and past participle of fight.
  35. n. In optics, a periodic phase through which Newton, in his emission theory of light, assumed the luminous corpuscles to pass, and which enabled them to be alternately reflected or transmitted at the surface of a refracting medium. This assumption formed the basis of the so-called theory of fits.

Wiktionary

  1. adj. Suitable, proper.
  2. adj. Adapted to a purpose or environment.
  3. adj. In good shape; physically well.
  4. adj. UK, slang Good looking, fanciable, attractive, beautiful.
  5. v. transitive To be suitable for.
  6. v. transitive To conform to in size and shape.
  7. v. transitive To make conform in size and shape.
  8. v. transitive To be in agreement with.
  9. v. transitive To adjust.
  10. v. transitive To attach, especially when requiring exact positioning or sizing.
  11. v. transitive To equip or supply.
  12. v. transitive To make ready.
  13. v. intransitive, archaic To be seemly.
  14. v. intransitive To be of the right size and shape, as of clothing.
  15. v. intransitive To be in harmony.
  16. n. The degree to which something fits.
  17. n. Conformity of elements one to another.
  18. n. advertising how well a particular commercial execution captures the character or values of a brand.
  19. n. statistics goodness of fit.
  20. n. archaic A section of a poem or ballad.
  21. n. medicine A seizure or convulsion.
  22. n. medicine A sudden and vigorous appearance of a symptom over a short period of time.
  23. n. A sudden outburst of emotion.
  24. n. A sudden burst (of an activity).
  25. v. intransitive, medicine To suffer a fit.

GNU Webster's 1913

  1. Obs. or Colloq. imp. & p. p. of fight.
  2. n. In Old English, a song; a strain; a canto or portion of a ballad; a passus.
  3. adj. Adapted to an end, object, or design; suitable by nature or by art; suited by character, qualitties, circumstances, education, etc.; qualified; competent; worthy.
  4. adj. obsolete Prepared; ready.
  5. adj. Conformed to a standart of duty, properiety, or taste; convenient; meet; becoming; proper.
  6. v. To make fit or suitable; to adapt to the purpose intended; to qualify; to put into a condition of readiness or preparation.
  7. v. To bring to a required form and size; to shape aright; to adapt to a model; to adjust; -- said especially of the work of a carpenter, machinist, tailor, etc.
  8. v. To supply with something that is suitable or fit, or that is shaped and adjusted to the use required.
  9. v. To be suitable to; to answer the requirements of; to be correctly shaped and adjusted to.
  10. v. To be proper or becoming.
  11. v. To be adjusted to a particular shape or size; to suit; to be adapted.
  12. n. The quality of being fit; adjustment; adaptedness; as of dress to the person of the wearer.
  13. n. The coincidence of parts that come in contact.
  14. n. The part of an object upon which anything fits tightly.
  15. n. Obs. or R. A stroke or blow.
  16. n. A sudden and violent attack of a disorder; a stroke of disease, as of epilepsy or apoplexy, which produces convulsions or unconsciousness; a convulsion; a paroxysm; hence, a period of exacerbation of a disease; in general, an attack of disease.
  17. n. A mood of any kind which masters or possesses one for a time; a temporary, absorbing affection; a paroxysm.
  18. n. A passing humor; a caprice; a sudden and unusual effort, activity, or motion, followed by relaxation or inaction; an impulsive and irregular action.
  19. n. rare A darting point; a sudden emission.

WordNet 3.0

  1. v. be agreeable or acceptable to
  2. n. a display of bad temper
  3. v. make fit
  4. v. be compatible, similar or consistent; coincide in their characteristics
  5. v. make correspond or harmonize
  6. n. a sudden flurry of activity (often for no obvious reason)
  7. n. the manner in which something fits
  8. adj. (usually followed by `to' or `for') on the point of or strongly disposed
  9. adj. physically and mentally sound or healthy
  10. n. a sudden uncontrollable attack
  11. adj. meeting adequate standards for a purpose
  12. v. provide with (something) usually for a specific purpose
  13. v. satisfy a condition or restriction
  14. v. be the right size or shape; fit correctly or as desired
  15. v. insert or adjust several objects or people
  16. v. conform to some shape or size

Etymologies

  1. Unknown, possibly from Old English fitt ("conflict"). (Wiktionary)
  2. Middle English fitten, to be suitable, marshal troops.Middle English, hardship, probably from Old English fitt, struggle.Middle English, from Old English. (American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition)

Examples

  • “Likewise has been accepted its law of development: _That_, _in the struggle for existence_, _the strong and fit and the progeny of the strong and fit have a better opportunity for survival than the weak and less fit and the progeny of the weak and less fit_.”

    War of the Classes

  • “Cathari ought not to be put to death after an ecclesiastical trial, lest the Church be compromised: "_Illud ab eo fit, cujus auctoritate fit_," he said, to justify his recommendation. [”

    The Inquisition A Critical and Historical Study of the Coercive Power of the Church

  • “Aditi Kinkhabwala of The Wall Street Journal took a closer look at recent seasons when the Giants were said to have "collapsed" and determined that the label fit only for 2010 and 2006.”

    NYT > Home Page

  • “Now everything I had left to my name fit neatly into two weathered brown suitcases, which I had to borrow, no less, from a friend across the hall, because the thieves had efficiently used my own suitcases to haul away my things.”

    Fictionaut: Powdered Sugar on Bare Skin

  • “The nickname fit better than the kids, or Luke himself, could know.”

    Simon & Schuster: Yellow Dirt

  • “Puts new meaning into the term fit for office -- Suzanne?”

    CNN Transcript Dec 29, 2008

  • “I'm too shabby, puts new meaning into the term fit for office.”

    CNN Transcript Dec 29, 2008

  • “And also if it's bible related wouldn't the title fit more of a Revelations ordeal?”

    Monstrous Poster - High Res

  • “Tr'Annhwi was standing in the doorway wearing an expression fit to curdle milk, and the tall shape of Commander t'Radaik was right beside him.”

    Simon & Schuster: The Romulan Way

  • “The title fit the proud man with the work-hardened hands.”

    A Man Called Jesse

Show 10 more examples...

Lists

These user-created lists contain the word ‘fit’.

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.

  • hernesheir Obsolete term for a canto or division of a long poem. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, the famous 14th century English poem, is divided into 4 fits. Sep 18, 2009

  • huntch Definition 28 (noun Archaic A section of a poem or ballad.) is not really archaic having been still familiar from Lewis Carrol 'Hunting of the Snark' and rejuvenated for many by Douglas Adams 'Hitch-hikers Guide to the Galaxy'. Sep 18, 2009

  • reesetee Funny. That's pretty much how I respond when someone wants me to buy aerobic fitness materials. ;-) Jan 15, 2009

  • garyth123 The Scottish folk group Old Blind Dogs come from the North East of Scotland. They have a CD entitled "Fit?", which in Doric would mean "What?" (perhaps an exasperated "What?"). When I was viewing the Amazon page for "Fit?" once they were also trying to sell me aerobic fitness dvds, leotards, books on fitness etc. Most amusing. Jan 15, 2009

  • garyth123 In Doric fit means "what". It can also mean foot (Scots), and by extension shoe. And it can have its usual meaning in English. Therefore it is perfectly feasible that you may hear the following sentence uttered (and understood) in a shoe shop in the Aberdeenshire area:

    Fit fit fits fit fit? Jan 15, 2009

  • oroboros Contronymic in the sense: accord vs. discord. Jan 27, 2007

Tweets

Looking for tweets for fit.

‘fit’ has been looked up 6198 times, loved by 1 person, added to 37 lists, commented on 6 times, and has a Scrabble score of 6.