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Christine Christie Posted 4 years ago
Grammar

Fit

Do these sentences make sense?


a) "He's not a fit employee."

b) "He's not a fit supervisor."

c) "He's not a fit director."

d) "He's not a fit investor."


Note: By 'fit', I mean someone who is good enough to fulfill those roles.



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THANK YOU.

  

Top answer

Yes, but it has to be in a context where the reader knows you mean "good enough". It also means "in good physical condition; healthy", so in a different context, your sentences could have this other meaning. That's not extremely likely, given the nouns you've used after "fit", but it could happen in other cases.

  • Yes, but it has to be in a context where the reader knows you mean "good enough".
  • It also means "in good physical condition; healthy", so in a different context, your sentences could have this other meaning.
  • That's not extremely likely, given the nouns you've used after "fit", but it could happen in other cases.
  • CJ
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1 Answers
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Yes, but it has to be in a context where the reader knows you mean "good enough". It also means "in good physical condition; healthy", so in a different context, your sentences could have this other meaning. That's not extremely likely, given the nouns you've used after "fit", but it could happen in other cases.

CJ

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