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Перевод: baggy
[прилагательное] мешковатый
Тезаурус:
- The battledress trousers were inclined to go baggy and the uniform jacket was a bit severe, so whenever we could get away with it we wore the other two items, and tended to let our hair float over our collars - also banned.
- Long flowing locks and pony tails spouted out under broad brimmed gypsy hats, colourful patterned shirts billowed out under velvet waistcoats as baggy strides and the occasional Mexican poncho began to displace the ubiquitous utilitarian uniform of black denim and DMs.
- I mean he doesn't dress up smartly, he likes wearing jeans and baggy shirts that are too big for him, and his haircut, now, that's a bit strange!
- Kylie reappeared on stage in a baggy white zoot suit to sing another of her personal favourites, "Je Ne Sais Pas Pourquoi".
- A third, a small blonde, always wore huge, baggy clothes and men's hoots, saying she wanted to look aggressive, to get away from the things that being small and blonde are supposed to mean, and that when she walked down the street wearing her monkey boots and trench coat she felt great, confident and striding, and daring anyone to make a comment.
- He wasn't the least bit fashionable, but he certainly had style, the way he shuffled around in sneakers and sweatshirts, hair pointing in all directions, corduroy trousers rumpled and baggy.
- REMEMBER THIS? baggy trousers
- Andrew sat down on the corner of the bed, his aged and baggy trousers flaring about him like the leggings of a geriatric Zouave.
- Otherwise the edge could be baggy around the cable.
- It was quite a small type, rarely weighing as much as 320kg, with short, thin legs, a proportionately large body, ridged backbone, big-bellied (the Red Poll still has a good rumen capacity for digesting quantities of low-grade roughage), rather plain and very lean, with a thin "snake" head, always polled, and a large baggy udder with prominent milk veins.
- The 1980 collection was the pirate look: white frilly shirts and baggy knee length trousers devised for Adam Ant, collected by the VA, and much favoured by those of a New Romantic persuasion.
- Even on the field he had his own personal trademark - flapping shirt sleeves and long, baggy shorts, which served both as a landmark for his colleagues and to help keep out the cold he felt so badly.
- That Angus Wilson respected the baggy monsters of the Victorian era is unquestionable.
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