fine
chance would be a fine thing: seechance.
cut it (or things) fine allow a very small margin of something, usually time.
fine and dandy excellent. informal
2013New Zealand Herald On the surface everything looks fine and dandy, but if you look more closely you find that certain sectors-steel and cement for example-are not doing well at all.
fine feathers beautiful clothes.
☞ The proverb fine feathers make fine birds, meaning that an eye-catching appearance makes a person seem beautiful or impressive, has been known in England since the late 19th century. It is recorded in the early 16th century in French as les belles plumes font les beaux oiseaux.
in fine feather: seefeather.
in fine fettle: seefettle.
not to put too fine a point on it to speak bluntly.
one fine day at some unspecified or unknown time.
1990Wilfred SheedEssays in Disguise If Sydney blew away one fine day, Melbourne could easily take its place as a center of mateship and conspicuous democracy.