释义 |
Definition of preggers in English: preggersadjective ˈprɛɡəzˈprɛɡərz British informal (of a woman) pregnant. Example sentencesExamples - Before you can say, ‘Hang on a sec, darling’, she's preggers and her French boyfriend's on the boat train back to Paris.
- The same thing happened when I was at the animal hospital, too; two or three people got preggers there, sometime before I left.
- I know it really is important to look after your breasts when you're preggers - mastitis is an evil thing indeed.
- He gets wounded and rushes home when he finds out his wife is preggers with his new son Edward, born in 1862.
- Nope, Jane ain't preggers yet, and there's no John Jr. in the works.
- Then she left school and she met someone, but fell preggers at 16.
- I really wanted to be a father and when she told me she was preggers I was so excited… then the miscarriage.
- I think it's an interesting option, actually, and one I'd probably go for if I found myself unexpectedly preggers and that option was available to me.
- I mean, look at me - I'm married and preggers - who thought that would ever happen?
- Xander didn't really have much of a choice in getting Leah preggers.
- Look, Nadia, they don't give a damn if you're sexually active or not, they just don't want you to get preggers.
- Sadly the are other reasons apart from financial why what are essentially children having children should not get preggers.
Synonyms expecting a baby, having a baby, with a baby on the way, having a child, expectant, carrying a child
Origin 1940s: abbreviation of pregnant + -ers. rugby from mid 19th century: The game of rugby is named after Rugby School in Warwickshire, England, the public school where it was first played. According to tradition, in a school football match in 1823 a boy named William Webb Ellis first took the ball in his arms and ran with it, so originating the game. The informal name rugger was invented at Oxford University in, it seems, 1893. At the time there was a student craze for adding –er to the end of words, which gave us words such as soccer, brekkers (for ‘breakfast’), and preggers (for ‘pregnant’), as well as some that lasted only for a year or so, like Pragger-Wagger for the Prince of Wales, and even wagger-pagger-bagger for ‘wastepaper basket’. Ironically, the craze started at Rugby School, home of rugby.
Definition of preggers in US English: preggersadjectiveˈprɛɡərzˈpreɡərz British informal predicative (of a woman) pregnant. Example sentencesExamples - Nope, Jane ain't preggers yet, and there's no John Jr. in the works.
- He gets wounded and rushes home when he finds out his wife is preggers with his new son Edward, born in 1862.
- Before you can say, ‘Hang on a sec, darling’, she's preggers and her French boyfriend's on the boat train back to Paris.
- I know it really is important to look after your breasts when you're preggers - mastitis is an evil thing indeed.
- Then she left school and she met someone, but fell preggers at 16.
- Look, Nadia, they don't give a damn if you're sexually active or not, they just don't want you to get preggers.
- I really wanted to be a father and when she told me she was preggers I was so excited… then the miscarriage.
- I mean, look at me - I'm married and preggers - who thought that would ever happen?
- Sadly the are other reasons apart from financial why what are essentially children having children should not get preggers.
- I think it's an interesting option, actually, and one I'd probably go for if I found myself unexpectedly preggers and that option was available to me.
- The same thing happened when I was at the animal hospital, too; two or three people got preggers there, sometime before I left.
- Xander didn't really have much of a choice in getting Leah preggers.
Synonyms expecting a baby, having a baby, with a baby on the way, having a child, expectant, carrying a child
Origin 1940s: abbreviation of pregnant + -ers. |