pants / jeans are called "pantalon" (masc.) in French, or else (very frequently) "un jean" (masc.)
jupe
'des jeans' or less frequently 'des blue-jeans'
IMPROVED: You can't say "pants down" alone in English or French. Those words are part of larger expressions.He pulled my pants down. = Il a descendu mes pantalons.He caught me with my pants down. = Il m'a encontré(e) exposé(e).pants fell down or caught with pants down.... pantalon est tombécaught with pants down (slang)... tombé dans la tartethere is another, using a french c word that is very bad; I will not say it here... : )
If by pants you mean trousers then the word is un pantalon curiously the word is singular in french.
pants (meaning trousers) are called 'les pantalons' (nearly often used in the plural) in French. When pants is meaning 'underpants', this is translated "sous-vêtements" inFrench.
chang2 ku4 = long pants ku4 zi3 = pants (this is a generic term referring to both long pants and/or shorts)
if you wanted to say pants you would say die Hose or if you wanted to say jeans you would say die Jeans
Jeans
Levi Strauss made pants or jeans
'des jeans' or less frequently 'des blue-jeans'
Jeans are elastic since you can substitute jeans with track pants or other pants.
Yes, they are, if they are used to cover your legs. Jeans are technically denim pants held together with metal studs. In Layman's terms: Yes, jeans are pants.
Jeans that say EST 89 on them are actually The Children's Place Jeans. They usually have a line with a loop on the back pockets if they are from TCP and say Est 89 on the interior seat of the pants.
Whoops, I did a poopy in my pants
Jeans
Due to the fact that jeans have all the same properties as pants, the legs, the waist. There is nothing, and never was any reason for anyone to think that jeans are not pants.
yes
jeans