Find the word definition

Crossword clues for trenchcoat

Wiktionary
trenchcoat

n. (alternative spelling of trench coat English)

Wikipedia
Trenchcoat (film)

Trenchcoat is a 1983 American action/comedy film starring Margot Kidder and Robert Hays.

Usage examples of "trenchcoat".

She slipped her right foot out of her shoe and then, with exquisite nonchalance, tucked her leg way up behind her against the wall so that it disappeared, storklike, behind the shroud of her trenchcoat.

Thousands of people streamed past him in the aisle, men in baseball caps, women wearing trenchcoats, uniformed schoolchildren, each bumping into his ribs or his knees with their luggage.

Disposed of not one, but two super-villains and come out of it all with only minor trenchcoat smutting and absolutely no interior pocket besmirchment whatsoever.

She wore a blue beret and a very old, First World War trenchcoat at least two sizes too big for her.

It'll he Doug Rowe wearing that white trenchcoat of his I hate so much and talking into his microphone and calling it 'the house where prominent Portland lawyer Gerald Burlingame and his wife Jessie died.

You know, one of those guys in a trenchcoat who lurks in dark alleys, keeping his camera ready just in case Mr.

She could see herself in the dull gold mirror behind the bar: a tall woman, broad shoulders made even wider by the army surplus trenchcoat she wore over jeans and jacket, her silhouette made even more bulky by the bags slung over her shoulder.

The Cat and Kryten turned to see Lister standing under the expansive arch of the kitchens' doors with a peroxide blonde in fishnet stockings, eight-inch stilettos and a huge army trenchcoat.

So I hiked up the collar of my trenchcoat, hiked down the snappy brim of my snap-brimmed fedora and hiked off into the shadows nil desperandum, per vas nefandum, as the French say.

They all turned their heads, saw a trenchcoated figure coming down the corridor.

Garraty and McVries watched him in fascinated silence for perhaps ten minutes, losing their own aches and tiredness in the trenchcoated boy's strugĀ­gle.