It came from the Dutch word docke.
From the Japanese word 'taikun' meaning great lord or prince
marco polo
The origin of a word indicates the language the word originally came from, or the languages certain parts (such as prefixes and suffixes) come from.
Jacob W.Davis, born in Latvia, invented the first working pair of trousers, also called 'pants'. He was a tailor back there and he moved from Russia to the US to again open up a tailor shop.
If I'm thinking correctly, BELT is a four letter word, and it holds up your pants :)
you will be a laughing stock
when men were in prison they had no belts to pull there pants up so when they came out of jail they wear ed their pants without belts
No, the word pants is not a collective noun. The noun pants is a binary noun, a word for a thing that is made up of two parts to make the whole. Examples of binary nouns are pants, glasses, scissors, pajamas, etc. A collective noun is a word to describe a group; for example a rack of pants, a row of pants, or a wardrobe of pants.
God came up with everything
The word pants comes from the term pantaloons which came from a play in the 800s with a character who was a fool and wore breeches that were tight at the knee. In the 1700s, this became the fashion for men of Europe. The word is mostly used by Americans. British prefer the term trousers.
The singular possessive form is pants'; the plural possessive form is pants'.The noun pants does not have a singular form, it is a binary noun, a word for something of two parts making up a whole. The noun pants is a short form for a pair of pants, or the plural pairs of pants.
Pants
He came up with the word BLING!
My but did.
Up your butt, around the corner, through the tubes, and out your boobs. Flew to Venus, came out your penis.
They came up with the name under armor by the armor in the T-shirt or sweat shirt,Pants