Encuentra profesores de Inglés
Hossein
Seat all out? What does it mean when the seat of the pants is all out? "IN THIS ARMY, "ONE HOLE IN THE SEAT OF THE BRITCHES "INDICATES A CAPTAIN, "TWO HOLES--A LIEUTENANT, "AND THE SEAT OF THE PANTS ALL OUT INDICATES THAT THE INDIVIDUAL IS A PRIVATE."
12 de abr. de 2019 11:09
Respuestas · 1
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Just taking it on the face of it....britches means pants, so if there's one hole in the back side, they are the pants of a captain; two holes in the back of the pants, then they belong to a lieutenant; but if there is not seat/bottom/backside at all, then they are the pants of a private. The seat is the whole backside of the pants, the part that covers the butt. I'd have to see it in context, but figuratively speaking, it probably means that a captain has more composure in the face of danger than a lieutenant, and a lieutenant has more composure than a private, but a private, who has no composure or nerve in the face of danger, has lost his pants from fear. (This imagery is reminiscent to a crude phrase which says that being afraid causes someone to soil their pants the way same way that a baby soils a diaper.)
12 de abril de 2019
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