"He thinks we need a miracle," Sticky said in a bleak
voice." "Well, optimism has never been his strong
suit," said Kate.
"Suit" -- is it pertain to playing cards?
"He thinks we need a miracle," Sticky said in a bleakI think you have an extra quote there!
voice." "Well, optimism has never been his strong
suit," said Kate.
"Well, optimism has never been his strong suit," said Kate.
You ask whether the term pertains, or is pertinent, to card
games. I think `suit' there denotes general perseverence
in an effort, but the dict.org begs to differ:
I think you have an extra quote there!I retyped it manually.
I think `suit' there denotes general perseverence in anAccording to THE FREE DICTIONARY, this term may refer
effort, but the dict.org begs to differ:
either to card games or to a highly developed
characteristic/talent/skill. Dict.org says it may refer
to a person's best asset & uses neatness as an example.
The second alternative is more figurative... but I think
you were on the right track when you mentioned
perseverance WRT Alexander's citation.
No matter what talents an individual was born with, they
may be improved by hard work & perseverance.
We could also say neatness isn't a person's forte, using
the term as it's used in music to refer to strength (but
not necessarily to volume). :-)
"Neatness is not his strong suit". But neatness is a
passive quality, not requiring creativity, courage,
fortitude, or vigour.
A suit of a man to a maid (whence 'suitor') is more to my
taste.
No matter what talents an individual was born with, they
may be improved by hard work & perseverance.
I quote the above for the fun of mentioning my surprise
upon initial misreading of `improved' as `removed'.
We could also say neatness isn't a person's forte, using
the term as it's used in music to refer to strength (but
not necessarily to volume). :-)
I believe `forte' refers to the attack of the sound rather
than to its volume -- a term I know not from music but from
electroacoustics. Yours is a fine point in both senses.
P.S.: I offer my warmest compliments on the coming of
the New Year and the going of the Old one. Has anything
changed, except the snow in the streets is not last year's?
P.P.S.: I see you indent the first line of your paragraphs by
nine spaces, which may be a typewriter convention.
But they having no line breaks, each one is essentially a very
long single line, whose proper display depends on whether and
how the client software re-flows it to screen width.
I therefore propose another step towards the typewriter
canon -- breaking lines at a readable lenght, which
is usually between sixty-five and seventy two characters.
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