pants
n. <英>(紧身的)短裤; <美> 裤子; 喘气( pant的名词复数 )
v. 喘气,喘息( pant的第三人称单数 ); 喘着气说
Pants are a piece of underwear which have two holes to put your legs through and elastic around the top to hold them up round your waist or hips.
I put on my bra and pants.
我戴上乳罩,穿上内裤。
Pants are a piece of clothing that covers the lower part of your body and each leg.
He wore brown corduroy pants and a white cotton shirt.
他身着棕色灯芯绒裤子和白色棉衬衫。
If you say that something is pants, you mean that it is very poor in quality.
The place is pants, yet so popular.
那个地方很糟糕,却很受欢迎。
If someone bores, charms, or scares the pants off you, for example, they bore, charm, or scare you a lot.
You'll bore the pants off your grandchildren...
你会把孙辈们烦透的。
We all love to frighten the pants off ourselves by going on hair-raising rides at funfairs.
我们都喜欢乘坐游乐场那些让人毛发直竖的游乐设施,把自己吓得魂不附体。
If you fly by the seat of your pants or do something by the seat of your pants, you use your instincts to tell you what to do in a new or difficult situation rather than following a plan or relying on equipment.
1. (usually in the plural) a garment extending from the waist to the knee or ankle, covering each leg separately;
2. (usually in the plural) underpants worn by women;
jeans, pants, slacks, shorts, trousers
这些名词均含有"裤子"之意。
catch someone with their pants (或trousers) down
(非正式)在某人尴尬不备时逮个正着
fly (或drive) by the seat of one's pants
(非正式)凭直觉做事
scare (或 bore etc.) the pants off someone
(非正式)把某人吓得魂不附体(或使某人感到特别乏味)
He rushed out in pants.
他穿着短裤就冲出来.
Catherine the Great was apparently an imperial hot pants.
叶卡捷琳娜二世显然是个风流女皇.
Fingers are pretty nifty. They let you a latte a keyboard, even pull up your pants.
手指非常灵巧, 他们帮你拿咖啡,打字, 或是拉裤子.
Mr. Jay wears the pants in that family.
那家由杰伊先生当家.
Mum, Tom is bad . He did his number two in the pants.
妈, 汤姆不乖,他把尿撒到裤子里去了.