knickerbockers
noun
- full breeches gathered into bands below the knee
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈnɪkəbɒkəz/ / /ˈnɪkɚbɑkɚz/
noun
Etymology: From Knickerbocker + -s, after the short breeches worn by Diedrich Knickerbocker in George Cruikshank's illustrations of Washington Irving's 1809 A History of New York.
- Men's or boys' baggy knee breeches, of a type particularly popular in the early 20th century.
“Five men and a woman, two young girls,[…], and a boy […] are at the machines sewing knickerbockers, “knee-pants” in the Ludlow Street dialect.”
“[…] and some gems that represent the tasseled garment that the leader wears show it in a distinctly religious connection. On a gem from Zakro it [the sistrum] is being being carried by a man who does not wear the loin-cloth, but a baggy kind of knickerbockers like the Moslem trousers of to-day.”