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Encyclopedia > Shoes
shoe for right foot
shoe for right foot

A shoe is a piece of footwear for humans, less than a boot and more than a slipper. This footwear is shaped to fit the foot (or the area below the ankle) with a flexible upper part of leather (or plastic) usually and a sole and heel of heavier material. Shoes differ from boots by not extending past the ankle. A moccasin is a specialized soft leather shoe worn by the Native Americans.


Because of (potential) foot odor, some people hate it if other people take their shoes off in their company. On the other hand, in some cultures (e.g. in Finland, Sweden, Japan and some parts of Canada), shoes are customarily removed when visiting someone's home. Guests do this to avoid tracking in dirt from outside and thus inconveniencing their host. In Arab cultures, showing the soles of your shoes to your host is considered insulting.


In trains it is often allowed to put one's feet on the opposite seat, provided that one takes one's shoes off or put them on a newspaper, piece of clothing, bag, etc., to avoid possible dirtying of the seat.


The shoe size units vary widely around the world. European sizes are measured in Paris Points which are worth two third of a centimeter. The UK and American units are approximately one quarter of inch, starting at 8 1/4 inches. Mens and womens shoe sizes often have different scales. More information can be found at the International Shoe Size Conversion Charts (http://www.i18nguy.com/l10n/shoes.html).


A shoe horn can also be used to insert a foot into a shoe by keeping the shoe open and providing a smooth surface for the foot to slide upon. Many shoes are nearly impossible to put on without the help of a shoe horn.


See also: footwear, shoelaces

Contents

Engineering

In mechanical engineering, a shoe (or brake shoe) is the restraint provided to the linings of the brake moving against the brake drum to stop its rotation. This type of shoe is commonly referred to as brake lining. It is also be plate between moving parts (and / or stationary parts) on to take the friction and allow means of adjustment. It is also be an outer cover treading of a pneumatic tire.


Horses

A horseshoe is nailed to underside of horse's hoof and serves a similar function as footwear for horses, and is installed by a farrier. This plate (or rim) is placed so as to prevent injury to the animal.


Comics

Shoe is the title of a comic strip originally by Jeff MacNelly, and after MacNelly's death by Chris Cassatt and Gary Brookins. [1] (http://macnelly.com/)


Gambling

In card games, a shoe is used to hold several decks of cards, typically used in games such as blackjack and baccarat. It has a slit at the bottom which allows one to draw one card at a time.


Also, "S.H.O.E" is an event at the World Series of Poker involving Seven-Card Stud, Texas Hold 'Em, Omaha, and Seven Card Stud, Eight or better


  Results from FactBites:
 
SHOE (886 words)
SHOE is a small extension to HTML which allows web page authors to annotate their web documents with machine-readable knowledge.
SHOE eliminates this problem by making it possible for web pages to include knowledge that intelligent agents can actually read.
SHOE Search Another Java tool that allows you to query SHOE information that has been discovered by Exposé.
Encyclopedia4U - Shoe - Encyclopedia Article (267 words)
Shoes differ from boots by not extending past the ankle.
A moccasin is a specialized soft leather shoe worn by the Native Americans.
In mechanical engineering, a shoe (or brake shoe) is the restraint provided to the linings of the brake moving hydraulically against the brake drum to stop its rotation.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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