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Trowsers

  • 1 trowsers

    • trousers

    English-Serbian dictionary > trowsers

  • 2 trousers

    • trowsers

    Serbian-English dictionary > trousers

  • 3 དོར་རྟ་

    [dor rta]
    part of trowsers which covers private parts

    Tibetan-English dictionary > དོར་རྟ་

  • 4 མོན་དར་

    [mon dar]
    raw silk stuff, silk petticoat or trowsers

    Tibetan-English dictionary > མོན་དར་

  • 5 brāca

        brāca ae, f (very rare), and brācae (bracc-), ārum, f    trowsers, breeches (of the Gauls, etc.), O., Pr., Ta., Iu.
    * * *
    trousers (usu. pl.), breeches, britches, pants

    Latin-English dictionary > brāca

  • 6 कौशेय


    kauṡeya
    mfn. silken MBh. etc.;

    (am) n. silk, silk cloth, silk petticoat orᅠ trowsers, a woman's lower garments of silk Pāṇ. 4-3, 42 Mn. Yājñ. MBh. etc.. ;
    N. of a locality Romakas. ;
    - yaka seeᅠ 2. kauṡa

    Sanskrit-English dictionary > कौशेय

  • 7 braca

    brācae (not braccae), ārum (once in sing. brāca, ae, Ov. Tr. 5, 10, 34; and as access. form brāces, Edict. Diocl. p. 20), f. [Germ.; Swed. brōk; Angl. -Sax. brōk; Engl. breeches; Dutch, broek], trowsers, breeches; orig. worn only by barbarians, i.e. neither Greeks nor Romans:

    barbara tegmina crurum,

    Verg. A. 11, 777;

    in the time of the emperors also among the Romans,

    Ov. Tr. 5, 7, 49: Galli bracas deposuerunt, latum clavum sumpserunt, Poët. ap. Suet. Caes. 80 al.:

    virgatae,

    Prop. 4 (5), 10, [p. 249] 43:

    bracas indutus,

    Tac. H. 2, 20; Juv. 2, 169:

    pictae,

    Val. Fl. 6, 227:

    Sarmaticae,

    id. 5, 424:

    albae,

    Lampr. Alex. Sev. 40 fin. al.; Cod. Th. 14, 10, 2; cf. Burm. Anth. Lat. 2, p. 518, and bracatus.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > braca

  • 8 bracae

    brācae (not braccae), ārum (once in sing. brāca, ae, Ov. Tr. 5, 10, 34; and as access. form brāces, Edict. Diocl. p. 20), f. [Germ.; Swed. brōk; Angl. -Sax. brōk; Engl. breeches; Dutch, broek], trowsers, breeches; orig. worn only by barbarians, i.e. neither Greeks nor Romans:

    barbara tegmina crurum,

    Verg. A. 11, 777;

    in the time of the emperors also among the Romans,

    Ov. Tr. 5, 7, 49: Galli bracas deposuerunt, latum clavum sumpserunt, Poët. ap. Suet. Caes. 80 al.:

    virgatae,

    Prop. 4 (5), 10, [p. 249] 43:

    bracas indutus,

    Tac. H. 2, 20; Juv. 2, 169:

    pictae,

    Val. Fl. 6, 227:

    Sarmaticae,

    id. 5, 424:

    albae,

    Lampr. Alex. Sev. 40 fin. al.; Cod. Th. 14, 10, 2; cf. Burm. Anth. Lat. 2, p. 518, and bracatus.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > bracae

  • 9 bracarius

    brācārĭus, ii, m. [braca], a maker of trowsers or breeches (late Lat.), Lampr. Alex. Sev. 24; Cod. Just. 10, 64, 1; Edict. Diocl. p. 20.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > bracarius

  • 10 bracatus

    brācātus, a, um, adj. [id.].
    I.
    Wearing trowsers or breeches.
    A.
    A gen. epithet for foreign, barbarian, effeminate:

    sic existimatis eos hic sagatos bracatosque versari,

    Cic. Font. 15, 33 (11, 23):

    nationes,

    id. Fam. 9, 15, 2:

    miles,

    Prop. 3 (4), 4, 17:

    turba Getarum,

    Ov. Tr. 4, 6, 47 Jahn:

    Medi,

    Pers. 3, 53.—
    B.
    As a geog. designation of the land and the people beyond the Alps, = transalpinus, in distinction from togatus (q. v.):

    Gallia Bracata, afterwards called Gallia Narbonensis,

    Mel. 2, 5, 1; Plin. 3, 4, 5, § 31; cf.:

    bracatis et Transalpinis nationibus,

    Cic. Fam. 9, 15, 2.—Hence, sarcastically:

    O bracatae cognationis dedecus (kindr. with the people of Gallia Bracata, through his maternal grandfather, Calventius),

    Cic. Pis. 23, 53: bracatorum pueri, boys from Gallia Narbonensis, Juv. 8, 234.—
    II.
    In gen., wearing broad garments:

    Satarchae totum bracati corpus,

    Mel. 2, 1, 10.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > bracatus

  • 11 braccae

    brācae (not braccae), ārum (once in sing. brāca, ae, Ov. Tr. 5, 10, 34; and as access. form brāces, Edict. Diocl. p. 20), f. [Germ.; Swed. brōk; Angl. -Sax. brōk; Engl. breeches; Dutch, broek], trowsers, breeches; orig. worn only by barbarians, i.e. neither Greeks nor Romans:

    barbara tegmina crurum,

    Verg. A. 11, 777;

    in the time of the emperors also among the Romans,

    Ov. Tr. 5, 7, 49: Galli bracas deposuerunt, latum clavum sumpserunt, Poët. ap. Suet. Caes. 80 al.:

    virgatae,

    Prop. 4 (5), 10, [p. 249] 43:

    bracas indutus,

    Tac. H. 2, 20; Juv. 2, 169:

    pictae,

    Val. Fl. 6, 227:

    Sarmaticae,

    id. 5, 424:

    albae,

    Lampr. Alex. Sev. 40 fin. al.; Cod. Th. 14, 10, 2; cf. Burm. Anth. Lat. 2, p. 518, and bracatus.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > braccae

  • 12 braces

    brācae (not braccae), ārum (once in sing. brāca, ae, Ov. Tr. 5, 10, 34; and as access. form brāces, Edict. Diocl. p. 20), f. [Germ.; Swed. brōk; Angl. -Sax. brōk; Engl. breeches; Dutch, broek], trowsers, breeches; orig. worn only by barbarians, i.e. neither Greeks nor Romans:

    barbara tegmina crurum,

    Verg. A. 11, 777;

    in the time of the emperors also among the Romans,

    Ov. Tr. 5, 7, 49: Galli bracas deposuerunt, latum clavum sumpserunt, Poët. ap. Suet. Caes. 80 al.:

    virgatae,

    Prop. 4 (5), 10, [p. 249] 43:

    bracas indutus,

    Tac. H. 2, 20; Juv. 2, 169:

    pictae,

    Val. Fl. 6, 227:

    Sarmaticae,

    id. 5, 424:

    albae,

    Lampr. Alex. Sev. 40 fin. al.; Cod. Th. 14, 10, 2; cf. Burm. Anth. Lat. 2, p. 518, and bracatus.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > braces

  • 13 sarabara

    sărăbāra, ōrum (collat. form sără-balla, Hier. Ep. 1, 9), n., or ae, f. [Persian]; cf. Gesen. under ], wide trowsers, such as are worn in the East, Tert. Pall. 4; id. Res. Carn. 58; Hier. ad Dan. 3, 21; cf. Isid. Orig. 19, 23, 2.—Form sarabala, Vulg. Dan. 3, 94.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > sarabara

  • 14 Breeches

    BREECHES (Braccas, Latin)
    This term described a portion of male attire, to which it was first applied in the 16th century. The Gaulish Britons and other Celtic nations used the word " trousers," full and gathered at the ankles (see Trowsers). In an inventory of 1581 there is mentioned " six pare of velvet brytches with three pare of lether brytches." King James had his breeches in great plaits and full stuffed. In 1614 an engraving of James I, the king is represented in stuffed breeches tapering to the knees; profusely slashed and striped with lace. In shape, style, length and fitting varied considerably during later times (see Bracca:, Bombards)

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Breeches

  • 15 אוורקסין

    אַוְורַקְסִין, אברסקיןm. pl. (cmp. אפקרסין, a. אַבְרְקִין) trowsers. Targ. Y. I, a. II Ex. 28:42; ib. I, Ex. 39:28 אוורקסי. Ib. Lev. 6:3 (ed. Vien. אורקטין, II אברסקין). Ib. 16:4. (For וו = פ v. אֶוְושַׁר.

    Jewish literature > אוורקסין

  • 16 אברסקין

    אַוְורַקְסִין, אברסקיןm. pl. (cmp. אפקרסין, a. אַבְרְקִין) trowsers. Targ. Y. I, a. II Ex. 28:42; ib. I, Ex. 39:28 אוורקסי. Ib. Lev. 6:3 (ed. Vien. אורקטין, II אברסקין). Ib. 16:4. (For וו = פ v. אֶוְושַׁר.

    Jewish literature > אברסקין

  • 17 אַוְורַקְסִין

    אַוְורַקְסִין, אברסקיןm. pl. (cmp. אפקרסין, a. אַבְרְקִין) trowsers. Targ. Y. I, a. II Ex. 28:42; ib. I, Ex. 39:28 אוורקסי. Ib. Lev. 6:3 (ed. Vien. אורקטין, II אברסקין). Ib. 16:4. (For וו = פ v. אֶוְושַׁר.

    Jewish literature > אַוְורַקְסִין

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  • trowsers — trows·ers …   English syllables

  • Trews — Trews, n. pl. Trowsers; especially, those of the Scotch Highlanders. He wore the trews, or close trowsers, made of tartan. Sir W. Scott. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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