Chino vs Jeans - What's the difference?
chino | jeans |
(pluralonly) A pair of trousers made from denim cotton.
* {{quote-magazine, date=2013-08-03, volume=408, issue=8847, magazine=(The Economist)
, title=
As a verb chino
is third-person singular past historic of chinare.As a noun jeans is
.As a proper noun jeans is
derived from a medieval variant of (john).jeans
English
Noun
(head)Revenge of the nerds, passage=Think of banking today and the image is of grey-suited men in towering skyscrapers. Its future, however, is being shaped in converted warehouses and funky offices in San Francisco, New York and London, where bright young things in jeans and T-shirts huddle around laptops, sipping lattes or munching on free food.}}