[
US
/ˈdʒinz/
]
[ UK /dʒˈiːnz/ ]
[ UK /dʒˈiːnz/ ]
NOUN
- (used in the plural) close-fitting trousers of heavy denim for manual work or casual wear
How To Use jeans In A Sentence
- During the search police seized a blue sweatshirt and a pair of jeans. Times, Sunday Times
- But she is unlikely to be wearing baggy jeans and a hard hat. Times, Sunday Times
- Faulkner wore jeans faded at the knees, a broad hat, and photochromic sunglasses.
- From his shiny, greasy, biker-looking jeans to his short, greying beard, he was muscle and bone.
- Back then, you could get a denim jacket and jeans for a fiver. The Sun
- I pulled on my jeans and ran downstairs.
- Try them out with a nice pair of Earth tone flat-front chinos or slim-fit blue jeans, and a classic button-down shirt - tucked in or not.
- The rest of us just have to buy bigger jeans and go to work regardless. The Sun
- Don't forget Persian lamb, broadtail, goat and other furs that are light and casual, so you can "dress them up or down, with jeans," says Ms. Landau, adding, "It's an easy glamour that you can wear even in California. Restyling Full-Length Mink Coats
- Jan would never slop around in old jeans.