Dictionary Definition
trousers n : (usually in the plural) a garment
extending from the waist to the knee or ankle, covering each leg
separately; "he had a sharp crease in his trousers" [syn: pants]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Noun
trousersTranslations
an article of clothing that covers the part of
the body between the waist and the ankles
- Arabic:
- Bosnian: pantalone f|p
- Breton: bragoù , brageier p
- Chinese: 裤子 (kùzi), 长裤 (chángkù)
- Croatian: hlače f|p
- Czech: kalhoty f|p
- Danish: bukser c p
- Dutch: broek f s
- Estonian: püksid p
- Faroese: buksur f|p
- Finnish: housut p
- French: pantalon m s
- German: Hose f s
- Hungarian: nadrág s
- Indonesian: celana
- Italian: calzoni f|p, pantaloni m|p, brache f|p
- Japanese: ズボン (zubon)
- Korean: 바지 (baji)
- Kurdish:
- Occitan: bragas f|p
- Polish: spodnie p
- Portuguese: calça f s
- Romanian: pantaloni
- Russian: брюки (brjúki) f|p, штаны (štaný) m|p
- Scottish Gaelic: briogais , triubhas
- Serbian:
- Slovak: nohavice f|p
- Slovene: hlače f|p
- Spanish: pantalón m s, pantalones m|p
- Swedish: byxor p
- Telugu: ప్యాంటు (paaMTu), పంట్లాం (paMTlaaM)
- Xhosa: iibhulukhwe
Extensive Definition
Trousers (or pants in Canada, South Africa
and the
United States, and sometimes called slacks or breeches
(sometimes )) are an item of clothing worn on the lower part
of the body, covering both legs separately (rather than with cloth
stretching across both as in skirts and dresses). Historically, as for the
West,
trousers have been the standard lower-body clothing item for males
since the 16th century; by the late 20th century, they had become
extremely prevalent for females as well. Trousers are worn at the
hips or waist, and may be held up by their
own fastenings, a belt, or
suspenders (braces).
Leggings
are form-fitting trousers of a clingy material, often knitted cotton and lycra.
Terminology
In North America, pants is the general category term, and trousers refers, often more formally, specifically to tailored garments with a waistband and (typically) belt-loops and a fly-front. For instance, informal elastic-waist knitted garments would never be called trousers in the U.S. Undergarments are called underwear, underpants, or panties (the last are women's garments specifically) to distinguish them from other pants that are worn on the outside. The term drawers normally refers to undergarments, but in some dialects, may be found as a synonym for "breeches", that is, trousers. In these dialects, the term underdrawers is used for undergarments.In Australia the
terms pants and trousers are synonymous.
In most parts of the United
Kingdom, trousers is the general category term, and pants
refers to underwear. In some parts of
Scotland,
trousers are known as trews; taken from the early Middle
English trouse, its plural developed into trousers.
Various people in the fashion industry use the
word pant instead of pants. This is grammatically incorrect. The
word pants is always in plural form much like the words scissors
and tongs. The origin of pants is due to the use of two pieces of
cloth in making it. Pant would actually mean just a single leg
being covered with clothing.
History
Nomadic Eurasian horsemen/women such as the Iranian Scythians, along with Achaemenid Persians were among the first to wear trousers.In ancient China, trousers were
only worn by cavalry.
According to tradition, they were first introduced by King Wu
of Zhao in 375 BC, who copied the custom from non-Chinese
horsemen on his northern border.
Trousers were introduced into Western European
culture at several points in history, but gained their current
predominance only in the 16th
century, from a Commedia
dell'Arte character named Pantalone
(Italian word for Trousers). In England in the Twelfth century, the
rustic were often seen in long garments to the ankle, rather like
trousers, which are really glorified braies. Strangely enough,
trouserlike garments, which became rare again in the thirteenth
century, vanished during the fourteenth century and scarcely
reappeared for six hundred years. The word itself is of Gaelic
origin, from the Middle Irish
word "triubhas" (close-fitting shorts).
Men's trousers
Trousers also trace their ancestry to the individual hose worn by men in the 15th century (which is why trousers are plural and not singular). The hose were easy to make and fastened to a doublet at the top with ties called "points", but as time went by, the two hose were joined, first in the back then across the front, but still leaving a large opening for sanitary functions. Originally, doublets came almost to the knees, effectively covering the private parts, but as fashions changed and doublets became shorter, it became necessary for men to cover their genitals with a codpiece.By the end of the 16th century, the codpiece had
been incorporated into the hose, now usually called breeches, which were roughly
knee-length and featured a fly or fall front opening.
During the French
Revolution, the male citizens of France adopted a working-class
costume including ankle-length trousers or pantaloons in place of
the aristocratic knee-breeches. This style was introduced to
England in
the early 19th century, possibly by Beau
Brummell, and supplanted breeches as fashionable street wear by
mid-century. Breeches survived into the 1940s as the plus-fours or
knickers
worn for active sports and by young school-boys. Types of breeches
are still worn today by baseball and football
players.
Sailors may have played a role in the
dissemination of trousers as a fashion around the world. In the
17th and 18th centuries, sailors wore baggy trousers known as
galligaskins.
Sailors were also the first to wear jeans -- trousers made of denim. These became more popular
in the late 19th century in the American
West, because of their ruggedness and durability.
Women's trousers
Although trousers for women in western countries did not become fashion items until the later 20th century, women began wearing men's trousers (suitably altered) for outdoor work a hundred years earlier.The Wigan pit brow girls
scandalized Victorian
society by wearing trousers for their dangerous work in the
coal
mines. They wore skirts over their trousers and rolled them up
to their waist to keep them out of the way.
Women working the ranches of the 19th century
American West also wore trousers for riding, and in the early 20th
century aviatrices and
other working women often wore trousers. Actresses Marlene
Dietrich and Katharine
Hepburn were often photographed in trousers from the 1930s and
helped make trousers acceptable for women. During World War
II, women working in factories and doing other forms of "men's
work" on war service wore trousers when the work demanded it, and
in the post-war era trousers became acceptable casual wear for
gardening, the beach, and other leisure pursuits.
In Britain during the Second
World War, because of the rationing of clothing, many women
took to wearing their husbands' civilian clothes, including their
trousers, to work while their husbands were away in the armed
forces. This was partly because they were seen as practical
garments of workwear, and partly to allow women to keep their
clothing allowance for other uses. As this practice of wearing
trousers became more widespread and as the men's clothes wore out,
replacements were needed, so that by the summer of 1944 it was
reported that sales of women's trousers were five times more than
in the previous year.
In the 1960s, André
Courrèges introduced long trousers for women as a fashion item,
leading to the era of the pantsuit and designer
jeans and the gradual eroding of the prohibitions against girls
and women wearing trousers in schools, the workplace, and fine
restaurants.
Society
It is customary in the western world for men to
wear trousers and not skirts or dresses. However, there are
exceptions, such as the Scottish kilt and the Greek foustanella, worn on
ceremonial occasions, as well as robes or robe-like clothing such
as the cassocks, etc. of
clergy and academic robes (both rarely worn in daily use today).
(See also Men's
skirts.) Based on Deuteronomy
22:5 in the Bible, some groups
believe that women should not
wear trousers, but only skirts and dresses.
Among certain groups, low-rise, baggy trousers
exposing underwear are
in fashion, e.g. among
skaters and
in 1990s hip hop
fashion despite its prison based origins.
Cut-offs are homemade shorts made by cutting the legs
off trousers, usually after holes have been worn in fabric around
the knees. This extends the useful life of the trousers. The
remaining leg fabric may be hemmed or left to fray after being
cut.
Law
In May 2004 in Louisiana, state legislator Derrick Shepherd proposed a bill that would make it a crime to appear in public wearing trousers below the waist and thereby exposing one's skin or "intimate clothing". The Louisiana bill was retracted after negative public reaction.In February 2005, Virginia
legislators tried to pass a similar law that would have made
punishable by a $50 fine: "any person who, while in a public place,
intentionally wears and displays his below-waist undergarments,
intended to cover a person's intimate parts, in a lewd or indecent
manner".
It is not clear whether, with the same coverage
by the trousers, exposing underwear was considered worse than
exposing bare skin, or that the latter was already covered by
another law.
It passed in the
Virginia House of Delegates. However, various criticisms to it
arose. For example, newspaper columnists and radio talk show hosts
consistently said that since most people that would be penalized
under the law would be young African-American
men, the law would thus be a form of
discrimination against them. Virginia's state senators voted
against passing the law.
A US mayor plans to pass a law banning the
wearing of saggy trousers in his Louisiana town. Carol Broussard,
mayor of Delcambre, said that he will sign the proposal unanimously
passed by town councillors. Wearing trousers that reveal your
underwear will lead to a $500 penalty and the risk of six months in
jail. "If you expose your private parts, you'll get a fine," said
Mr Broussard. He told the Associated Press that people wearing
low-slung trousers are "better off taking the pants off and wearing
a dress." Ted Ayo, town attorney, said that the new legislation
would expand on existing indecent exposure laws in Louisiana: "This
is a new ordinance that deals specifically with sagging pants. It's
about showing off your underwear in public". Mr. Broussard has
received local criticism for the ordinance, with some Delcambre
residents claiming that the proposal is racially motivated, due to
the popularity of "sagging pants" among black hip-hop fans.
However, he responded: "White people wear sagging pants,
too."
See also
References
trousers in Catalan: Pantaló
trousers in Czech: Kalhoty
trousers in German: Hose
trousers in Spanish: Pantalón
trousers in Esperanto: Pantalono
trousers in French: Pantalon
trousers in Scottish Gaelic: Briogais
trousers in Korean: 바지
trousers in Indonesian: Celana
trousers in Icelandic: Buxur
trousers in Italian: Pantaloni
(abbigliamento)
trousers in Hebrew: מכנסיים
trousers in Lithuanian: Kelnės
trousers in Hungarian: Nadrág
trousers in Mongolian: Өмд
trousers in Dutch: Broek (kledingstuk)
trousers in Dutch Low Saxon: Bokse
trousers in Cree: ᐱᔨᒌᔅ
trousers in Japanese: ズボン
trousers in Norwegian: Bukse
trousers in Norwegian Nynorsk: Bukse
trousers in Narom: Braies
trousers in Polish: Spodnie
trousers in Portuguese: Calça
trousers in Kölsch: Boz (för Aanzedonn)
trousers in Russian: Брюки
trousers in Sicilian: Càusi
trousers in Simple English: Pants
trousers in Finnish: Housut
trousers in Silesian: Galoty
trousers in Swedish: Byxor
trousers in Tajik: Шим
trousers in Turkish: Pantolon
trousers in Ukrainian: Штани
trousers in Yiddish: הויזן
trousers in Contenese: 褲
trousers in Chinese: 褲