/pænts/
- Australia, Canada, India, New-Zealand, Northern-EnglandAn outer garment that covers the body from the waist downwards, covering each leg separately, usually as far as the ankles; trousers.
““But they cover the legs,” Joseph explained. “That is the only reason my people wear pants: to cover the legs in the winter, or when traveling through rough country, full of thorns. In warm weather, o”
“It's in the evening after dark when the blackleg miner creeps to work. With his moleskin pants and his dirty shirt, there goes the blackleg miner.”
“Then he gave me a last desperate push and I tripped over the shorts caught around my ankles and fell down. I tried to pull my pants up with my boxing gloves but without success.[…]In those days nobody”
- UK, plural, plural-onlyAn undergarment that covers the genitals and often the buttocks and the neighbouring parts of the body; underpants.
“I decided to pass up her underclothes, not from feelings of delicacy, but because I couldn't see myself putting her pants on and snapping her brassière.”
“Big girls get candy for dry pants.”
“As she bent over the intercom the little skirt went peek-a-boo and you could see white pants cupping her buttocks like a bra.”
- UK, plural, plural-only, slangRubbish; something worthless.
“You're talking pants!”
“The film was a load [or pile] of pants.”
- form-of, pluralplural of pant
- British, slangOf inferior quality, rubbish.
“Your mobile is pants — why don’t you get one like mine?”
“'Is that what you're going to do when you graduate?' he asked. 'Be a photographer?'
'I wish, but I'm pants at the technical stuff. ...'”
“"Lee? How'd you manage to find your way here? You're pants with directions. You always get lost."”
- To pull someone’s pants down; to forcibly remove someone’s pants.
“Keith Gerber has been pantsed twice already this summer by Lannie and Cling, and so his face is more resolved, the fear tempered by the fact that he understands these things to be inevitable.”
“[T]he other boys, Stretch Latham and Rod Becker mainly, pantsed him, got his jockey shorts away and threw them onto Hubcap Willie’s roof.”
“Richard did not stand too close to him, because he was always trying to pants him, and he would have died of shame if he did it tonight, because he knew his BVDs were dirty at the trap door.”
- form-of, indicative, present, singular, third-personthird-person singular simple present indicative of pant
- form-of, pluralplural of Pant
Formspant(attributive) · more pants(comparative) · most pants(superlative) · pantses(present, singular, third-person) · pantsing(participle, present) · pantsed(participle, past) · pantsed(past)