1. Dictionary

    sit
    [sit]
    verb
    sit (verb) · sits (third person present) · sat (past tense) · sat (past participle) · sitting (present participle)
    1. adopt or be in a position in which one's weight is supported by one's buttocks rather than one's feet and one's back is upright:
      "I sat next to him at dinner" · "you can sit wherever you like"
      • cause (someone) to sit.
      • (of an animal) rest with the hind legs bent and the body close to the ground:
        "it is important for a dog to sit when instructed"
      • ride or keep one's seat on (a horse):
        "have you never sat a horse before?"
      • (of a table, room, or building) be large enough for (a specified number of seated people):
        "the cathedral sat about 3,000 people"
      • (of a hen or other bird) settle on eggs for the purpose of incubating them:
        "don't introduce a new male when the hens are sitting"
      • NORTH AMERICAN ENGLISH
        not use (a player) in a game:
        "the manager must decide who to sit in the World Series"
    2. be or remain in a particular position or state:
      "the fridge was sitting in a pool of water"
      • (of an item of clothing) fit a person well or badly as specified:
        "the blue uniform sat well on his big frame"
    3. (of a legislature, committee, court of law, etc.) be engaged in its business:
      "Congress continued sitting until March 16"
      • serve as a member of a council, jury, or other official body:
        "the Senate has 100 members who sit for 6 years" · "they were determined that women jurists should sit on the tribunal"
    4. BRITISH ENGLISH
      take (an examination):
      "pupils are required to sit nine subjects at GCSE" · "he was about to sit for his Cambridge entrance exam"
    5. stay in someone's house while they are away and look after their house or pet:
      "Kelly had been cat-sitting for me"
      • babysit.
    noun
    sit (noun) · sits (plural noun)
    1. a period of sitting:
      "a sit in the shade"
    2. archaic
      the way in which an item of clothing fits someone:
      "the sit of her gown"
    Origin
    Old English sittan, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch zitten, German sitzen, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin sedere and Greek hezesthai.
    Translate sit to
    No translation found.
    Similar and Opposite Words
    verb
    1. adopt or be in a position in which one's weight is supported by one's buttocks rather than one's feet and one's back is upright:
      seat oneself
      settle down
      be seated
      take a chair
      install oneself
      ensconce oneself
      plant oneself
      plump oneself
      sink down
      Opposite:
      • (of a table, room, or building) be large enough for (a specified number of seated people):
        have seats for
        have space for
        have room for
    2. be or remain in a particular position or state:
      be situated
      be located
      be positioned
      be sited
      be placed
      • (of a legislature, committee, court of law, etc.) be engaged in its business:
        be in session
        • serve as a member of a council, jury, or other official body:
          serve on
          have a seat on
          hold a seat on
          be a member of
          carry out duties on
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    3. sit verb us / sÉŞt / uk / sÉŞt / present participle sitting | past tense and past participle sat sit verb (BE SEATED) Add to word list A1 [ I or T, usually + adv/prep ] to (cause someone to) be in a position in which the lower part of the body is resting on a seat or other type of support, with the upper part of the body vertical:
      dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/sit
      sit intransitive verb sat; sitting 1 : to occupy a place as a member of an official or formal body
      www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/sit
       
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