long-john

English

Alternative forms

Noun

long-john

  1. (used attributively as a modifier) Of or relating to long johns (the undergarment).
    • 1982, Thomas Mordane, Bloodroot, Dell Books, →ISBN, page 200:
      Bloody to the elbows from gutting it, sweat pouring down his joy-reddened face, stripped down to his long-john top despite the twenty-degree cold, he had dragged the deer down from the top of Widdershins where he’d shot it three hours earlier.
    • 1993, Warren D. Bowman, Outdoor Emergency Care: Comprehensive First Aid for Nonurban Settings, 2nd edition, National Ski Patrol System, Inc., →ISBN, →LCCN, page 207, column 3:
      You open your first aid belt, take out a seam ripper, and expertly open the seam of the left pant leg to the knee. Then you open the seam of the left long-john leg to the knee.
    • 2000, Ian Wilson, Sally Wilson, Wilderness Journey: Reliving the Adventures of Canada’s Voyageurs, West Vancouver, B.C., Seattle, Wash.: Gordon Soules Book Publishers Ltd., →ISBN, page 190:
      While lying down, she wriggled into wool long-john top and bottoms.
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