get in someone's pants

English edit

Verb edit

get in someone's pants (third-person singular simple present gets in someone's pants, present participle getting in someone's pants, simple past got in someone's pants, past participle (UK) got in someone's pants or (US) gotten in someone's pants)

  1. Alternative form of get into someone's pants
    • 2012, S.C. Stephens, Thoughtless, →ISBN:
      Things were finally comfortable between us; I didn't need my sister messing that up ... or trying to get in his pants.
    • 2016, Michelle Smith, Game On, →ISBN:
      And then she told me to stop trying to get in her pants. In my defense, I wasn't really trying to get in her pants. It was an honest-to-God compliment.
    • 2017, Laura Florand, A Kiss in Lavender, →ISBN:
      But he hadn't gotten in her pants yet, so that might keep him motivated for a while.