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Encyclopedia > Plimsoll shoe

Plimsoll shoe
Plimsoll shoe

A plimsoll or plimsoll shoe is a type of athletic shoe with a canvas upper and rubber sole, developed as beachwear in the 1830s by the Liverpool Rubber Company (later to become Dunlop). The shoe was originally called a sand shoe, and acquired the nickname 'plimsoll' in the 1870s. This name derived either because of the colored horizontal band joining the upper to the sole resembled the Plimsoll line on a ship's hull, or because, just like the Plimsoll line on a ship, if water got above the line of the rubber sole, the wearer would get wet. Image File history File links 9642555_b0ad209fbb. ... Image File history File links 9642555_b0ad209fbb. ... An athletic shoe is a generic name for a shoe designed for sporting activities, as differentiated from, for instance, dress shoes. ... Look up Sole in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ... Liverpool is a major city and metropolitan borough in Merseyside, England, along the eastern side of the Mersey Estuary. ... People whose family name is or was Dunlop include James Dunlop (1793-1848), Scottish-Australian astronomer John Boyd Dunlop, Scottish inventor and founder of the Dunlop rubber company John Thomas Dunlop, United States administrator Sir Edward Weary Dunlop, Australian war hero Douglas Morton Dunlop, Scottish-American professor of history and... The Plimsoll line is the mark on the hull of a ship that shows where the waterline is when the ship is loaded to full capacity according to the condition of the water at the point of loading. ...


As it was commonly used for corporal punishment in the British Commonwealth, where it was the typical gym shoe (part of the school uniform), plimsolling is also a synonym for a slippering. A slippering is a metonymical term for a spanking of the buttocks or a beating of the hands using a slipper or (more often, though than it is a euphemism) firmer footwear, especially gym shoes (part of the school uniform; thus often at hand, in sports the same may go...

  • In Australia and other places such footwear is still referred to as a Sandshoe and include the similar shoe, the Dunlop Volley.
  • In most of English-speaking North America, these shoes are colloquially referred to as "Chucks" — in reference to Converse's Chuck Taylor All Star shoe — usually regardless of the manufacturer. Depending on the regional dialect, however, they may also be known as sneakers or tennis shoes.
  • In the UK these shoes were compulsory in school's PE lessons and today are still known as Plimsolls, except in western Scotland where they are usually known as gutties and parts of Southern England and Wales, where they are known as daps or dappers. Their use however is decreasing with trainers being used more often. However, the shoe has become an icon of many generations -- and music genres, including Grunge, hip-hop, emo and gangsta rap.
  • In Northern Ireland and parts of Scotland, these shoes are known as 'guddies.'

  Results from FactBites:
 
Online Etymology Dictionary (2089 words)
Shoes tied to the fender of a newlywed couple's car preserves the old custom (mentioned from 1546) of throwing an old shoe at or after someone to wish them luck.
type of footwear, 1478, from slip (v.), the notion being of a shoe that is "slipped" onto the foot.
Mary Jane is 1921 as the proprietary name of a kind of low-heeled shoe worn chiefly by young girls, 1928 as slang for marijuana.
IndustryPlayer - Entrepreneur Game - License Info Sport Shoes (TEXTILE) (2050 words)
White plimsolls were popular with Victorian promenaders and as the middle classes sought more and more leisure activities in the form of sport, the plimsoll evolved into many forms.
The development of the plimsoll meant by the turn of the century sneakers and plimsolls were widely worn by children.
Shoes are made to a last which is a model of the foot, but not an exact anatomical replica.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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