word looked up : home / archive

 T-shirt : T-Shirt 

A T-shirt is a shirt with short sleeves, a round neck, put on over the head, without pockets. It was originally used as undershirt. This is still done, but it is also often worn as the only clothing on the upper part of the body (except that women often wear a bra under it). The length varies: while it typically reaches the waist, it isn't uncommon for it to extend to the crotch or perhaps a little longer. One fashion is an "oversized" T-shirt. A very long T-shirt is similar to a dress, but if a man wears it this isn't associated with cross-dressing. A difference is that somebody wearing a long T-shirt usually has trousers under it, but somebody in a dress only underwear.

Often a text and/or picture is printed on it: a slogan, something funny, about an event, about an artist, etc.

The idea of the T-shirt came to the USA during WWI when US soldiers noticed the light cotton undershirts European soldiers were using while the US soldiers sweated in their wool uniforms. Since they were so much more comfortable they quickly became popular among the Americans, and because of their design they got the name T-shirt.

During WWII the T-shirt had become standard issue underwear in both the US army and navy. After WWII the T-shirt started appearing without a shirt covering it. John Wayne, Marlon Brando and James Dean all wore them on national TV. At first the public was shocked but by 1955 it had became acceptable. The T-shirt became cool when James Dean wore it in the film Rebel Without A Cause.

In the 1960s people started to tie dye and screenprint the basic T-shirt and variants such as the tank top, muscle shirt, scoop neck, V-neck etc. became popular.

young man.html">man, and he pressed it silently, putting into that manly caress all ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS: Mobile and complaisant conscience.html">conscience had already forgiven himself Sufficed him to conceive the plan of a reparation End of this Project Gutenberg Etext of Cosmopolis, v4 ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS FOR THE ENTIRE COSMOPOLIS: Conditions of blindness so voluntary that they become complicity Egyptian tobacco, mixed with opium and saltpetre Has as much sense as the handle of a basket I no longer love.html">love you Mediocre sensibility Mobile and complaisant conscience had already forgiven himself Not an excuse, but an explanation of your conduct Only one thing infamous in love, and that is a falsehood Scarcely a shade of gentle condescension That suffering which curses but does not pardon The forests have taught man liberty There is always and everywhere a duty to fulfil Too prudent to risk or gain much Words are nothing; it is the tone in which they are uttered by Paul Bourget .

 On wordlookup.net  

All is still licensed under the GNU FDL.
It uses material from the wikipedia.



logo

navig stuff

home
archive