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    fighting fit

    adjective

    • 1. in excellent health: "Mary had responded to treatment and seemed fighting fit"
  2. adjective [ after verb ] UK uk / ˌfaɪ.tɪŋ ˈfɪt / us / ˌfaɪ.t̬ɪŋ ˈfɪt / Add to word list. extremely healthy: At 73, she's still fighting fit, walking five miles a day. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Animal physiology: fit & healthy. acrobatically. agility. agree with something. amazonian. athleticism. glow. hale and hearty.

  3. If you describe someone as fighting fit, you are emphasizing that they are very fit or healthy. [ British , emphasis ] After a good night's sleep I feel fighting fit again.

  4. In a state of preparation or good condition to handle a particular situation. Primarily heard in UK, Australia. We have to make sure we're fighting fit going into this trial. Don't worry, the election is four months away, so you've got plenty of time to get fighting fit. After studying for weeks, I finally felt fighting fit for my senior exams.

  5. fighting fit (not comparable) (UK) Sufficiently fit to participate in fighting; hence, in top physical condition. , “Driving and Firing Modern French Steam Locomotives”, in. after this as we went outside to prepare the engine for the return journey.

  6. A complete guide to the word "FIGHTING FIT": definitions, pronunciations, synonyms, grammar insights, collocations, examples, and translations.

  7. adjective in excellent health Mary had responded to treatment and seemed fighting fit Examples From the very expensive to platters that suits the middle class incomes, the Capital is now finally offering healthy, fighting fit options.

  8. Different ways to say 'fighting fit'. Find more synonyms and antonyms for 'fighting fit' at bab.la.

  9. fighting fit meaning, definition, what is fighting fit: extremely fit and healthy: Learn more.

  10. To be in very good health. Primarily heard in Australia. My father has never been sick a day in his life—he's truly fighting fit. Now that I'm going to the gym regularly, I hope to be fighting fit soon.

  11. The earliest known use of the adjective fighting-fit is in the 1890s. OED's earliest evidence for fighting-fit is from 1891, in the writing of Rudyard Kipling, writer and poet. fighting-fit is formed within English, by compounding.