In American English, pants are an outer layer of clothing for your legs, like jeans or slacks. In British English, pants are an inner layer; specifically, it refers to underpants. In American English, khaki is a brown color. In British Englihs, khaki means shitty.
So apparently, GAP's "khaki pants" advertisement campaign was a real hoot in the UK.
Khaki is the colour of army uniforms, and in British English is pronounced with the stress on the second syllable. "Cack" means shit. So it sounds like Americans are saying "cacky pants", which is definitely a hoot.
Thank you for the clarification - someone told me about the GAP khaki pants ad campaign when I was in Edinburgh for grad school in 2003. We were probably drinking when the topic came up, so I didn't get all the details straight!
no subject
Date: 2021-01-13 07:35 pm (UTC)In British English, pants are an inner layer; specifically, it refers to underpants.
In American English, khaki is a brown color.
In British Englihs, khaki means shitty.
So apparently, GAP's "khaki pants" advertisement campaign was a real hoot in the UK.
no subject
Date: 2021-01-19 10:51 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2021-01-20 02:15 am (UTC)