panted

English

Etymology

From pant + -ed.

Verb

panted

  1. simple past and past participle of pant

Adjective

panted (not comparable)

  1. Synonym of trousered
    • 1915, “Our Sumatra Leper Colony”, in All the World, volume XXXVI, page 576:
      From six large buildings, along six different pathways, walk, hobble, or shuffle nearly 250 white-coated and blue-panted figures to the great Central Hall.
    • 1964, The Ladder, Arno Press, page 16:
      An inside contact reports that fashion artists are being told to draw their panted women to "look like lesbians."
    • 1969, Kerima Polotan, ““Madama” in the Palace”, in Imelda Romualdez Marcos, The World Publishing Company, page 217:
      The long-haired hippie, unwashed and unshaved, walked into Imelda’s drawing room, or the leather-panted woman striding in with the air of one who had ridden through cowboy country and tied her sweating horse at the Palace gate: []

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