chaparejos
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Spanish.
Noun
[edit]chaparejos pl (plural only)
- chaps (trousers)
- 1920, Jackson Gregory, Man to Man[1]:
- In the store the long shelves upon one side held dry-goods, while upon the opposite shelves a miscellany of groceries was displayed; toward the rear was the storekeeper's assortment of hardware near a counter piled high with sweaters, boots, chaparejos, all jumbled hopelessly.
- 1911, Thomas Carson, Ranching, Sport and Travel[2]:
- To protect our legs we wore over the trousers heavy leather chaparejos, sometimes of bear or buffalo hide.
- 1910, Edgar Beecher Bronson, The Red-Blooded Heroes of the Frontier[3]:
- Lean, wiry, bronzed men, their legs cased in leather chaparejos, with small boots, high heels, and great spurs, they were, despite their loose, slouchy seat, the best rough-riders in the world.
- 1905, Will Lillibridge, Ben Blair[4]:
- What he saw was a tall slim young man, in chaparejos and sombrero, the inevitable "repeater" at his hip, solitarily engaged in the process of breaking a bronco.
Derived terms
[edit]- chaps (partly from Spanish chaparreras)