(a.) Resembling a bag; loose or puffed out, or pendent, like a bag; flabby; as, baggy trousers; baggy cheeks.
Example Sentences:
(1) January 31, 2014 He's joined the Baggies on loan until the end of the season.
(2) I told them that the ladies prefer a man in a suit to one in baggy trousers, with visible underwear and garish "trainers".
(3) Jelavic's penalty was saved by the Baggies keeper Ben Foster but Rosenior was on hand to head home the rebound and score his first senior goal since October 2009.
(4) I was a typical ex-art-school kid, going to work in a baggy T-shirt and pyjama bottoms.
(5) But while Spurs had almost twice as much ball, even allowing for the Baggies’ second-half surge, they were grateful to share the goals.
(6) His puffa jacket and baggy jeans emphasise his large frame and suit his defensive attitude, and it is clear he is used to being an intimidating presence.
(7) He is wearing a baggy pinstripe suit that fails to disguise what's going on underneath.
(8) Aside from the sheer filth factor, not washing your jeans means they will lose their shape (two words: baggy arse), smell and look dirty, because they are dirty.
(9) The author dissected 30 orbital regions and studied the intraorbital fat topography and its anterior expansions, "the baggy eyelids".
(10) Clad in traditional baggy trousers and the woolly cap of a Muslim pilgrim, Hamdi Olas was 55 when he was struck by a sniper’s bullet.
(11) Plater and two pals then marched on to the stage in string vests, baggy shorts and false moustaches.
(12) Over five years after their epochal debut, the Stone Roses emerged from tortuous recording sessions, sounding like a baggy Led Zeppelin, to find that fellow Mancunians Oasis had stolen their thunder.
(13) And I heard these two people speaking English, so I went up to talk to them, this young woman with blonde hair and this old man in baggy shorts and no shirt.
(14) Long was barracked by the visiting Baggies fans for his part in the penalty incident, falling under the challenge of Craig Dawson in the box after what television replays suggested had been minimal contact.
(15) Sweating all day in my baggy khaki pants and loose white shirt with thin khaki stripes, I looked miserable.
(16) With the T-shirts, Hamnett showed padded white silk decontamination suits, generously cut, beautifully detailed parkas and trench coats, cropped jackets in heavy cotton, skirts that were straight and short or long, narrow and flared from round about knee level, unisex baggy slept-in trouser suits in dark denim.
(17) So how did this rumpled everyman, who dresses in T-shirts and baggy trousers to meet corporate chiefs, end up being courted by the global elite, from princes to politicians?
(18) Instead of White’s signature tighty whiteys, Cranston’s Lyndon Baines Johnson sports a pair of baggy boxers.
(19) We had baggy trousers and were dancing like maniacs and everyone was like, 'What the fuck are you lot doing?'
(20) At Stuyvesant, dress code violators are pulled out of class and made to change into a large baggy shirt.
Knickerbockers
Definition:
(n. pl.) The name for a style of short breeches; smallclothes.
Example Sentences:
(1) Taking up one corner of the courtyard that is also the home of Crate Brewery and a short walk from another important nightclub, Bloc , the Yard has managed to carve a niche as a lighthearted venue that programmes interesting contemporary dance and theatre, as well as some of the best underground nights in the city, from migrant solidarity techno night Free Movement of People to queer dance party Knickerbocker.
(2) He performed with Sadler's Wells Royal Ballet (now Birmingham Royal Ballet ) for seven years, but never felt at home as a ballet dancer (skipping about in pink knickerbockers was a particular low point).
(3) Broadstairs is very quaint: there’s Punch and Judy, there’s a bandstand, you can go for a walk on the beach and enjoy a knickerbocker glory.
(4) At the age of six, for a family wedding, he delighted in choosing his pageboy outfit – maroon knickerbockers, white stockings, frilly shirt, ballet shoes ("I'd have worn it to school if they'd let me").