Adjective
suited (comparative more suited, superlative most suited)
- (usually with to, for or an adverb) Suitable.
1685, Richard Lucas, The Duty of Servants […], page 55:Particular Forms suited to particular occasions, I have endeavour’d to provide in this Treatise, for general ones, Morning and Evening, you may use these which follow.
1849 March 29, John Henry Newman, “[Letter to Frederick William Faber]”, in Charles Stephen Dessain, editor, The Letters and Diaries of John Henry Newman, volume 13, published 1963, page 94:In saying that London is more suited to me than Birmingham, I mean more suited to me as a missioner; therefore it would absorb my time in mission etc work, while Birmingham does not.
1978, Edward Dorn, in Edward Dorn, Stephen Fredman, An Interview with Edward Dorn, page 38:So I heard AM radio. It seemed to me very suited for the road.
- (card games, in combination) Having the specified kind or number of suits.
a three-suited hand
- (poker, of two or more cards) Of the same suit.
Brunson has ace-king suited in the small blind
- (not comparable) Wearing a suit.
2003, Jonathan Swan, Quack Magic: The Dubious History of Health Fads and Cures, Ebury Press, →ISBN:Skull-caps and alchemical paraphernalia surrounded the seventeenth-century quack, whereas his nineteenth-century equivalent might appear top-hatted and suited, evidently a person of learning and ‘quality’.
2011, Amber Kizer, Wildcat Fireflies, Delacorte Press, →ISBN, page 36:“Them?” I pointed to a couple of top-hatted, suited men leaning against a building farther down the street.