List of synonyms from "breeches" to synonyms from "bride and groom"
Discover all the synonyms available for the terms brick in a wall, breeze in, breezy, breezeless, breed, brick and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the synonyms associated with it.
Definition of the day : « breeches »
- As in pants : noun clothing for legs, lower half of body
- As in rump : noun bottom, posterior of animal or human
- As in seat : noun rear end of animate being
- As in trousers : noun pants
- As in behind : noun buttocks
- As in bottom : noun rear end
- As in pedal pushers : noun pants that end just below the knee
- As in rear end : noun hind part
- As in hose : noun stockings
- As in tush : noun bottom
- As in clothe : verb cover with apparel
- I'll get a pair of ridin' breeches an' boots for you by tomorrow.
- Extract from : « Thoroughbreds » by W. A. Fraser
- Pierre, utterly bewildered, could find neither his breeches nor his cassock.
- Extract from : « The Three Cities Trilogy, Complete » by Emile Zola
- The man hath a straight sword within he leg of his breeches.
- Extract from : « Micah Clarke » by Arthur Conan Doyle
- Then came the ominous clicking of the breeches as cartridges were thrust home.
- Extract from : « The Law-Breakers » by Ridgwell Cullum
- It is an excrescence, not an essential garment like the shirt and breeches.
- Extract from : « Brighter Britain! (Volume 1 of 2) » by William Delisle Hay
- His lordship threw off his dressing-gown and stood forth in shirt and breeches.
- Extract from : « Mistress Wilding » by Rafael Sabatini
- Femoralia magistri—the breeches of the master, or the masters breeches.
- Extract from : « The Comic Latin Grammar » by Percival Leigh
- She turned to Rotherby, who stood there in shirt and breeches and shoeless, as he had fought.
- Extract from : « The Lion's Skin » by Rafael Sabatini
- I grabbed for Jud, and my fingers caught the knee of his breeches.
- Extract from : « Dwellers in the Hills » by Melville Davisson Post
- Eric had worn his breeches a long while before he put them on for the first time.
- Extract from : « In a Little Town » by Rupert Hughes
