It is hard to let out a waist of jeans unless they have already been taken in. To take in a pair of jeans to make them smaller, you would fold in a small edge on the inside and sew it shut.
A waistband is a band of fabric encircling the waist, especially a part of a pair of trousers or a skirt.
It depends how big the pair of trousers are.
"There is a pair of trousers" is correct because "pair" is a singular noun and takes a singular verb.
The singular form is a pair of trousers; the plural form is pairs of trousers.The noun trousers is one of a group of words that are a short form for 'a pair of', words for things things that require two halves to make one.Some other nouns that are used in their shortened form are pants, shorts, glasses, binoculars, tweezers, tongs, or pajamas. The singular forms are a pair of, the plural form is pairs of.
There is no standard collective noun for a group of trousers.A collective noun is an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the context can function as a collective noun; for example, a rack of trousers, a row of trousers, a heap of trousers, etc.Note: The noun 'trousers' is a binary noun, a word for something made up of two parts to make the whole. The noun 'trousers' is a plural uncountable noun. A binary noun is a shortened form of 'a pair of' or 'pairs of'. The noun 'pair' is not a collective noun in this context.
Because!
Because you need one trouser for each leg - a pair of trousersTrousers is a plural noun referring to an outer garment covering the body from the waist to the ankles, with a separate part for each leg.The single form is used in certain circumstances:I've torn my trouser pocketShe wore a stunning trouser suitTrouser pressHe tore his left trouser leg
A belt loop is a highway which loops around the perimeter of a major city, or a loop of fabric ringing the waist of a pair of trousers, used to hold the belt in place.
A belt loop is a highway which loops around the perimeter of a major city, or a loop of fabric ringing the waist of a pair of trousers, used to hold the belt in place.
I'd roll up the hems so they look like highwater/flood pant length. You could also add a pair of supenders to pull them up above your natural waist.
no just the waist
Yes, the word 'trousers' is a noun, a common, concrete, uncountable noun; a word for a pair of pants; a word for a thing.The noun 'trousers' is a binary noun, a word for something that is two parts making up the whole, they are a shortened form for 'a pair of'.