Avoid comparisons with the athletes and complete your side stripe trews look with towering heels.
From the expressandstar.com
This made them a Lowland Regiment and forced them to adopt trews.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Trews are often worn in summer and warm climes.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Or is Christmas perhaps the one time of year when we can wear burgundy or forest green trews without looking too weird?
From the guardian.co.uk
As the twin pop stars strode out in unashamedly second-hand Levi's, a generation of middle-class teens warmed to the idea of wearing someone else's trews.
From the independent.co.uk
The story of Friedrich Behaim's skimpy trews illustrates neatly how Rublack uses fabric as a kind of thread that, followed carefully, leads us deep into the early modern mind.
From the guardian.co.uk
I shall send this article to my bewildered sister in law, who has a brand new pair of leather trews from the husband, and is neither Chrissie Hynde nor Miss Collins, in style.
From the guardian.co.uk
Traditional black-tie Lowland dress is a variant of the normal black tie that includes tartan trews rather than the usual trousers and may include a suitable kilt jacket instead of the dinner jacket.
From the en.wikipedia.org
The new regiment is also primarily a kilted one and there are concerns that the much older Lowland units, which traditionally wore trews, will be effectively absorbed into a Highland tradition.
From the en.wikipedia.org
More examples
Tight-fitting trousers; usually of tartan
Trews (Truis or Truibhas) are men's clothing for the legs and lower abdomen, a traditional form of Irish and Scottish apparel. Trews could be trimmed with leather, probably buckskin, especially on the inner leg to prevent wear from riding on horseback. Trews is the origin of the word trousers.
The Trews are a Canadian rock band from Antigonish, Nova Scotia, consisting of vocalist Colin MacDonald, guitarist John-Angus MacDonald, bassist Jack Syperek, and drummer Sean Dalton. The band is currently based in Toronto, Ontario.
(trew) True
An early Celtic garment consisting of loose-fitting breeches and hose, knitted into one piece, and worn by Highlanders as they walked the moors of Scotland.