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Suit of clothes   /sut əv kloʊðz/   Listen
Suit of clothes

noun
1.
A set of garments (usually including a jacket and trousers or skirt) for outerwear all of the same fabric and color.  Synonym: suit.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Suit of clothes" Quotes from Famous Books



... it and anything else he could find with appetite, and then went upstairs to shave and do his hair nicely and to put on a new suit of clothes, which he considered became him. Also, as he had still three-quarters of an hour to spare, he began to write a little poem about Isobel, which was a dismal failure, to tell the truth, since he could think of no satisfactory rhyme to her name, except "O well!" which, ...
— Love Eternal • H. Rider Haggard

... story. I was eleven years old when MY BROTHER STEPHANE died. Scarcely was he buried when my father called me to him. He held in his hand a suit of clothes like these I wear now, and he said to me: 'Stephane, understand me clearly. It was my daughter that just died, my son lives still.' And as I persisted in not understanding him, he had a coffin brought in, placed on a table and he ...
— Stories of Modern French Novels • Julian Hawthorne

... too, never grew shorter, though time after time long pieces were cut off to make the warrior a new suit of clothes to go to Court in at the ...
— Japanese Fairy Tales • Yei Theodora Ozaki

... two long and trying weeks, which wore both of us down noticeably, he had the job done. It was not an unqualified success. He regarded is as a suit of clothes, but I knew better; it was a set of slip covers, and if only I had been a two-seated runabout it would have proved a perfect fit, I am sure; but I am a single-seated design and it did not answer. I wore it to the war because ...
— "Speaking of Operations--" • Irvin S. Cobb

... Barbier, it was a significant chance which had thrown him across David's path. In former days this lively Frenchman had been a small Paris journalist, whom the coup d'etat had struck down with his betters, and who had escaped to England with one suit of clothes and eight francs in his pocket. He reminded himself on landing of a cousin of his mother's settled as a clerk in Manchester, found his way northwards, and had now, for some seventeen years, been maintaining himself in the cotton capital, ...
— The History of David Grieve • Mrs. Humphry Ward


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