skivvies skivvies
Skivvies are underwear.A "skivvy" is a woman servant who carries out menial tasks such as scrubbing floors, also called a drudge.The plural of "skivvy" is "skivvies"
Skivvies. Origin is military slang.
divvied, savvied, savvy, skivvies
It is not known when the first shirt was made. Sailors wore some of the first t-shirts and they were referred to as skivvies.
savvy divvy divvied divvying divvies civvies skivvies revved revving flivver flivvers navvy navvies
Ask him if your seeing him in his skivvies bothered him. If so, apologize (even if it wasn't intentional) On the other hand, he may be bothered about how you reacted to seeing him . . .
That is the correct spelling of the term "skivvy" but the more common use of the word is the plural "skivvies" as a colloquial term for men's underwear.
green2. Nah, Phillip Wilcher wore a red shirt with large white dots on the cover of their debut album which appeared in July 1991 and in their first music video for "Get Ready to Wiggle". Wilcher left not long after the album was released. The Wiggles were not wearing their characteristic coloured skivvies at that time.When they did wear the skivvies, Anthony Field was the original Green Wiggle for a few years before changing colours to become the Blue Wiggle to avoid confusion with the green of Dorothy the Dinosaur.
bevvies, bevvy, bovver, chivvied, chivvies, chivvy, chivvying, civvies, divvied, divvies, divvy, divvying, luvvie, luvvies, navvies, navvy, revved, revving, savvy, skivvied, skivvies, skivvy, skivvying
anchovies, bevies, civvies, envies, gravies, heavies, ivies, levies, movies, navies, navvies, privies, savvies, skivvies. "Savvies" is borderline. "Savvy" can be a noun, adjective, or verb. As a verb, its third person singular form in the present tense would be "savvies": "Does he savvy what we're saying? Yes, he savvies." That's singular. As a noun, it's usually a mass noun like "gold" or "sugar", meaning that you would rarely use it in the plural at all. But you could say "She's got the savvies to survive in the cutthroat fashion world," kind of like "She's got the smarts ...." "Envies" is subject to the same objection as "savvies". The dictionary says that "Skivvies" (underwear) is a trademark, but there's also a British slang term for a female servant, "skivvy". All of the words mentioned are plurals of nouns that end in "-vy" except "movies".
No. As nice as technology advances are there should be places that remain device free. Theaters and restaurants are places of romance, experience, and escape. Cell phone use in these areas becomes an unwanted disruption to the imaginative experience.Look Up - Laura Benanti and The Skivvies