dungarees
English
WOTD – 23 June 2009
Etymology
From dungaree + -s, from Hindi डूंगरी (ḍūṅgrī, “coarse calico”), from the name of a village.
Pronunciation
- (UK, US) IPA(key): /ˌdʌŋ.ɡəˈɹiːz/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
Noun
dungarees pl (plural only, attributive dungaree)
- Heavy denim pants or trousers, usually with bib and braces, worn especially as work clothing.
- Synonym: (US, Canada) overalls
- Helen donned a pair of faded dungarees and grabbed her knapsack before rushing off to school.
- 2018 July 1, Sharon Walker, “Thirty years since the second summer of love”, in The Guardian[1]:
- I’d arrived at Heaven nightclub, underneath the Charing Cross railway arches, on a hot Sunday afternoon to find my friends had already gone in – you didn’t risk hanging back and missing your chance – so I joined the queue of kids dressed in the acid house uniform of Day-Glo dungarees and smiley T-shirts.
Translations
heavy denim pants or overalls
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