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trews
[trooz]
noun
close-fitting tartan trousers, worn especially by certain Scottish regiments.
trews
/ truːz /
plural noun
close-fitting trousers, esp of tartan cloth and worn by certain Scottish soldiers
Word History and Origins
Origin of trews1
Word History and Origins
Origin of trews1
Example Sentences
They were joined by Sir Walter Scott dressed in trews as a sore rash prevented him from wearing a kilt.
The man was dressed all in green: dusty green trews, green jacket, and a dark green coat.
“I said the war will happen for dozens of reasons, not for one. Another of the reasons for this particular war is because Queen Morgause wears the trousers. Perhaps I ought to say the trews.”
And do you spurn your trousers, a multiplication of the already bifurcated trouse and trews?
Is that so far from Browne’s trews, a new point of masculine sexual display?
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