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Re: "caught with the pants down"Posted by Smokey Stover on July 29, 2006 In Reply to: "Caught with the pants down" posted by Frank Soto on July 28, 2006
: The phrase "caught with the pants down" where is it coming from? I'm not sure what you want. If he was on the john (yes, the Romans had toilets) with his pants down to the floor (or even to his knees), he surely couldn't run away or defend himself. The same fate befalls any man caught with his pants down. Figuratively, as in something like, Supervisor Jackson was caught with his pants down on this one, it could mean that he was exposed doing something he didn't wish exposed. It can also mean caught unprepared. The Oxford English Dictionary is not extravagantly generous with examples of usage in this case. Its definitions is: "5. colloq. a. to be caught with one's pants down: to be surprised in an embarrassing situation; to be caught off guard. |