释义 |
baggybag‧gy /ˈbæɡi/ adjective  - a baggy red sweater
- Bill was wearing a polo shirt and baggy blue pants.
- I like T-shirts as long as they're really baggy.
- It obviously showed, but I wore big baggy clothes.
- Miguel was wearing one of his new silk shirts, baggy whites, and loafers.
- Pulling on the soft, baggy shirt she slept in, she sat on the bed and massaged her legs.
- She had always had grey hair, scraped back into a no-nonsense knot and wore baggy knitted suits.
- The man who got out wore baggy cotton fatigues and knee-boots.
loose clothes► loose loose clothes do not fit your body tightly: · She wore a long, loose linen jacket.· In hot weather, loose cotton clothes are more comfortable.· The top fitted me, but the shorts were a little loose round the waist. ► baggy baggy clothes are designed to be big and loose and hide the real shape of your body: · Bill was wearing a polo shirt and baggy blue pants.· I like T-shirts as long as they're really baggy. ► loose-fitting loose, especially in order to be comfortable: · I wore loose-fitting clothes to protect me from the heat of the sun.· A kung fu suit should be loose-fitting, with buttons and a high collar. ► shapeless large and loose, and having no shape or style: · He looked dirty and was wearing an ugly, shapeless suit.· Helen's hat was limp and shapeless from the rain. NOUN► clothes· It obviously showed, but I wore big baggy clothes.· Teen-age girls cut their hair and dressed in baggy clothes to be less attractive to the mysterious killer.· She didn't eat much anyway, and looked thin and anorexic, even through her baggy clothes.· Several ancient men in worn and baggy clothes sit at separate tables drinking neat whiskey and half pints of Beamish. baggy clothes are big and do not fit tightly on your body OPP tight: She was wearing jeans and a baggy T-shirt. |