English edit

 
"Sit-up-and-beg" style bicycle.

Adjective edit

sit-up-and-beg (not comparable)

  1. (cycling) Having handlebars that curve backwards, so that the rider can sit straight rather than hunching forward.
    • 1999, Frank Wrigley, The boy at Willows End: growing up in the Fens in 1940:
      The four boys, now safely sitting on the plinth of the War Memorial, turned their attention to the sight of the Vicar who was cycling along the street on his sit-up-and-beg bicycle.
    • 2007, Gwyneth Daniel, Trevor Daniel: doing the right thing:
      To replace my first (secondhand sit-up-and-beg) bike, he insisted that I had another, bigger one. He'd painted it bright blue, the colour of the cover to this book.
    • 2009, Joe Bindloss, Northeast India:
      There are no specialist cycle-tour companies based in the northeast, but you can find bicycles for hire for local sightseeing. Expect to pay Rs30 to Rs100 per day for an Indian-made sit-up-and-beg bike.

Noun edit

sit-up-and-beg (plural sit-up-and-begs)

  1. A bicycle of this kind.

Anagrams edit