jeans

listen to the pronunciation of jeans
Englisch - Türkisch
{i} kot pantolon

Kot pantolonlar her şeyle gider. - Jeans go with everything.

O genellikle kot pantolon giyer. - She usually wears jeans.

blue jeans
blucin

Sami blucin giyiyordu. - Sami was wearing blue jeans.

Ne Tom ne de Mary blucin giyiyor. - Neither Tom nor Mary has blue jeans on.

Jean
{i} kot

Meg kot pantolon giyen tek kızdı. - Meg was the only girl that was wearing jeans.

Tom mavi bir gömlek ve mavi kot pantolon giyiyordu. - Tom was wearing a blue shirt and blue jeans.

jean
kot pantolon

Meg kot pantolon giyen tek kızdı. - Meg was the only girl that was wearing jeans.

Franco'nun mavi bir kot pantolonu var. - Franco has blue jeans.

hip-hugger jeans
Düşük belli, kalça kısmını saran, dizden aşağıya doğru genişleyen ve genelde kot kumaşından yapılan pantolon. İspanyol paça pantolon
hip-hugger jeans
dar kot pantalon
jean
{i} cin kumaş. --s
low hip jeans
düşük bel
old-school hood jeans
old-school hood kot
skinny jeans
Dar kot pantolon

My mom bought me new skinny jeans, and they are black.

stoned jeans
Taşlanmış kot
Jean
(isim) kot
i would like a pair of jeans
kot rica ediyorum
jean
blucin

Ne Tom ne de Mary blucin giyiyor. - Neither Tom nor Mary has blue jeans on.

Sami blucin giyiyordu. - Sami was wearing blue jeans.

jean
bir çeşit kaba pamuklujeans bu bezden yapılan pantolon
jean
{i} cin, cin pantolon; blucin
Türkisch - Türkisch

Definition von jeans im Türkisch Türkisch wörterbuch

JEAN
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Dev. Gayet büyük. Dev cüsseli
Englisch - Englisch
plural form of jean
A pair of trousers made from denim cotton

Traditionally most jeans are dyed dark blue.

{i} jean, heavyweight cotton fabric; blue jeans, pants made of jean
plural of jean
A pair of trousers made from denim cotton, normally dyed dark blue
Which, according to kids, are appropriate for just about any occasion, including church and funerals
Jeans are casual trousers that are usually made of strong blue cotton cloth called denim
jeans jacket
A type of jacket made from denim, popular material that is used for jeans. Typically it has long sleeves and ends at the waist
jeans suit
suit in a youthful style that is sewn from jeans material
Jean
A female given name

He was trying to think of her name; she had come to cook him dinner twice last spring. - - - Jean, maybe. Or Betty. One of these plain names.

blue jeans
A pair of trousers made from denim cotton and dyed dark blue
cream in one's jeans
To ejaculate while wearing one's trousers

And you always cream in your jeans when your neck breaks. It has something to do with the pressure on the spinal cord being transmitted through the prostate.

cream in one's jeans
To experience an orgasm while clothed; to be thoroughly excited or delighted

Myrna was certain the woman would cream in her jeans at this opportunity to be a good neighbor.

jean
Made of denim (as "jean jacket")
hip-hugger jeans
Hip-huggers are a style of pants worn by both men and women, generally made of denim and fitted tightly around the hips and thighs, while flaring out towards the lower leg. Hip-hugger jeans were popular during the 1960s and into the early 1980s. The hip-huggers of the 60s and 70s can be distinguished from those of the 90s by the tightness of the knee
old-school hood jeans
(Giyim) Slim-fit pants have a snug fit through the legs and end in a small leg opening. Jeans may be cut in this style, and then are often called skinny jeans. Other names for this style include carrot leg pants, cigarette pants, drainpipes, peg leg pants, pencil pants, skinny pants, slimjims, tapered pants, old-school hood jeans or ice-cream cone pants. In some styles, zippers are needed at the bottom of the leg to facilitate pulling them over the feet. Stretch denim, with anywhere from 2% to 4% spandex, may be used to allow jeans to have a super-slim fit
Jean
{i} male first name (form of John); female first name
Jean
Jean François Gravelet Jean Boulogne Jean Baptiste Poquelin Agassiz Jean Louis Rodolphe Alembert Jean Le Rond d' Anouilh Jean Marie Lucien Pierre Aristide Jean Bertrand Arp Jean Atget Jean Eugène Auguste Bailly Jean Sylvain Barraqué Jean Barras Paul François Jean Nicolas viscount de Barrault Jean Louis Barthou Jean Louis Baudot Jean Maurice Émile Baudrillard Jean Maurice Jean Berger Beliveau Jean Marc A. Belmondo Jean Paul Berain Jean the Elder Berry Jean de France duke de Bienville Jean Baptiste Le Moyne de Blanc Jean Joseph Charles Louis Blanchard Jean Pierre François Bodin Jean Bokassa Jean Bédel Bordet Jules Jean Baptiste-Vincent Bouillaud Jean Baptiste Boulanger Georges Ernest Jean Marie Brébeuf Saint Jean de Brillat Savarin Jean Anthelme Bunau Varilla Philippe Jean Buridan Jean Jean Cauvin Chalgrin Jean François Thérèse Champollion Jean François Charcot Jean Martin Chardin Jean Baptiste Siméon Jean Baptiste Bernadotte Chrétien Joseph Jacques Jean Clouet Jean Cocteau Jean Colbert Jean Baptiste Condorcet Marie Jean Antoine Nicolas de Caritat marquis de Coralli Jean Corot Jean Baptiste Camille Cruveilhier Jean Darlan Jean Louis Xavier François Daubenton Louis Jean Marie Debré Michel Jean Pierre Delacour Jean Theodore Delors Jacques Lucien Jean Dessalines Jean Jacques Dubuffet Jean Philippe Arthur Dunant Jean Henri Fantin Latour Ignace Henri Jean Théodore Foucault Jean Bernard Léon Fouquet Jean Fourier Jean Baptiste Joseph Baron Fragonard Jean Honoré Froissart Jean Gabin Jean Jean Alexis Moncorgé Genet Jean Géricault Jean Louis André Théodore Gérôme Jean Léon Getty Jean Paul Giraudoux Hyppolyte Jean Godard Jean Luc Greuze Jean Baptiste Gros Antoine Jean Harlow Jean Houdon Jean Antoine Ingres Jean Auguste Dominique Jaurès Auguste Marie Joseph Jean Jean de Paris Joinville Jean sire de Joliot Curie Jean Frédéric Jean Frédéric Joliot Jean Louis Lebris de Kerouac Killy Jean Claude King Billie Jean Billie Jean Moffitt La Bruyère Jean de La Fontaine Jean de Lacoste Jean René Laffite Jean Lamarck Jean Baptiste de Monet knight de Lattre de Tassigny Jean Marie Gabriel de Jean Margaret Wemyss Le Pen Jean Marie Lesage Jean Lully Jean Baptiste Marat Jean Paul Marchand Jean Millet Jean François Monnet Jean Norma Jean Mortenson Murdoch Dame Jean Iris Nicolet Jean Noverre Jean Georges Jean d'Ockeghem Oudry Jean Baptiste Piaget Jean Pigalle Jean Baptiste Pompidou Georges Jean Raymond Poulenc Francis Jean Marcel Pucelle Jean Rabéarivelo Jean Joseph Racine Jean Baptiste Rameau Jean Philippe Rampal Jean Pierre Louis Jean Baptiste Reinhardt Renoir Jean Rhys Jean Ribaut Jean Richelieu Armand Jean du Plessis cardinal and duke de Riesener Jean Henri Rimbaud Jean Nicolas Arthur Riopelle Jean Paul Robert Houdin Jean Eugène Jean Eugène Robert Roberval Jean François de la Rocque lord de Rochambeau Jean Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur count de Jean Marie Maurice Scherer Louis Henri Jean Farigoule Rousseau Jean Jacques Saint Jean Lac Sartre Jean Paul Say Jean Baptiste Sibelius Jean Sismondi Jean Charles Léonard Simonde de Steichen Edward Jean Édouard Jean Steichen Tinguely Jean Toomer Jean Trintignant Jean Louis Julia Jean Mildred Frances Turner Vestris Marie Jean Auguste Vigo Jean Villemin Jean Antoine Vuillard Jean Édouard Watteau Jean Antoine Jean Jacques Fougère Audubon Jean Rabin Crèvecoeur Michel Guillaume Saint Jean de
Jean
Hypocoristics: Jeanie, Jeannie
Sir James Hopwood Jeans
born Sept. 11, 1877, London, Eng. died Sept. 16, 1946, Dorking, Surrey British physicist and mathematician. After teaching at Cambridge and Princeton, he worked as a research associate at the Mount Wilson Observatory (1923-44). He proposed that matter was continuously created throughout the universe (see steady-state theory). He wrote on a wide variety of phenomena but is perhaps best known as a writer of popular books about astronomy
Sir James Jeans
born Sept. 11, 1877, London, Eng. died Sept. 16, 1946, Dorking, Surrey British physicist and mathematician. After teaching at Cambridge and Princeton, he worked as a research associate at the Mount Wilson Observatory (1923-44). He proposed that matter was continuously created throughout the universe (see steady-state theory). He wrote on a wide variety of phenomena but is perhaps best known as a writer of popular books about astronomy
blue jeans
Blue jeans are the same as jeans. faded blue jeans. blue trousers made in a heavy material = jeans
blue jeans
{i} pants made of blue denim, pants made of blue jean
jean
Denim
jean
a coarse durable twill-weave cotton fabric
jean
(usually plural) close-fitting pants of heavy denim for casual wear
jean
{i} sturdy cotton fabric, denim
jean
A twilled cotton cloth
pair of jeans
pants made out of jeans fabric, jeans
jeans

    Silbentrennung

    Jeans

    Türkische aussprache

    cinz

    Aussprache

    /ˈʤēnz/ /ˈʤiːnz/

    Etymologie

    [ 'jEn ] (noun.) 1577. Shortening of jean fustian, itself from jean (from Middle English Gene (“Genoa ”), the -s was added influenced by the cognate Old French Jannes, (modern=) Gênes) + fustian (“strong cotton fabric”) (from Middle English, from Old French fustaine, from medieval Latin fustaneum, probably from Latin fustis (“club; (medieval sense) tree trunk”).
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