baggy

[ UK /bˈæɡi/ ]
[ US /ˈbæɡi/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. not fitting closely; hanging loosely
    baggy trousers
    a loose-fitting blouse is comfortable in hot weather
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How To Use baggy In A Sentence

  • But she is unlikely to be wearing baggy jeans and a hard hat. Times, Sunday Times
  • The man who got out wore baggy cotton fatigues and knee-boots.
  • Dropping the towel he tugged on a pair of baggy, black jeans with lots of zippers and safety pins on them.
  • While all the other girls' clothes were cute and baggy and slouchy, my pencil skirt and tweed vest fit tight across my hips and butt.
  • The book is ridiculously baggy and poorly paced: my paperback is practically cuboidal but in its 700 words pages big events are often compressed whilst minor ones are leisurely pondered. Revelation, Redemption and Absolution
  • His garments were about like ordinary street clothes, belted tunic and baggy trousers, but a certain precision in their cut-as well as blue-and-gold stripes and the double fylfot embroidered on the sleeves-indicated they were a livery. The Earth Book of Stormgate
  • If someone harvest a buck go out and cut the tarsal gands from the hind hocks, I would suggest using disposalable gloves and a zip lock baggy to hold your bounty. Deer Actractants
  • In baggy collarless cream shirt and hip-hugging chino trousers he looked so overwhelmingly attractive that she couldn't drag her eyes away.
  • Baggy tunic tops, sweaters and man-size T-shirts can be worn until the end of your pregnancy if you get them large enough.
  • The men wear baggy trousers, usually made of indigo-dyed homespun fabric.
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