释义 |
hot pants noun- sexual desire US, 1929
- If she ever got hot pants, it wasn’t for her husband. — Raymond Chandler, The Long Goodbye, p. 285, 1953
- I’ve still got hot pants for her, if you want to call that love. — Mary McCarthy, The Group, p. 48, 1963
- “You’ve got the hot-pants–and you’ll pay for it–just like I do–because you have to!” he lashed. — John Rechy, City of Night, p. 166, 1963
- He’ll think I have hot pants. — Elmore Leonard, The Big Bounce, p. 178, 1969
- When a woman’s glands is actin’ up and she can’t control certain urges–they say she’s got hot pants! Same as the meathead there. Hot trousers, hot pants, same thing! — Eugene Boe (Compiler), The Wit & Wisdom of Archie Bunker, p. 153, 1971
- I’m not going to screw it up just because you people got hot pants. — George V. Higgins, The Friends of Eddie Doyle, p. 74, 1971
- Squeezed it harder than he had ever squeezed any hot-pants cheerleader in his daddy’s old Pontiac. — Tom Robbins, Another Roadside Attraction, p. 223, 1971
- “Damn, baby,” Roman exclaimed, “it seems as if all the bitches got hot pants for you, Prince.” — Donald Goines, Black Gangster, p. 23, 1977
- tight, skimpy shorts as a (surprisingly enduring) fashion item UK, 1970
Deriving, no doubt, from the sexual sense. - You wear them hot pants, they’re out of style. — Rod Stewart, You’re Insane, 1977
- Kylie Minogue, clearly no doormat, owes her resurgence to a pair of gold hot pants that directed attention to her fetishised bottom rather than her less-than-spectacular voice. — The Guardian, 4 August 2003
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