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kimono : ウィキペディア英語版
kimono

The is a Japanese traditional garment. The word "kimono", which actually means a "thing to wear" (''ki'' "wear" and ''mono'' "thing"), has come to denote these full-length robes. The standard plural of the word kimono in English is ''kimonos'', but the unmarked Japanese plural ''kimono'' is also sometimes used. Kimono is always used in important festival or formal moments, it is the representative of polite and a very formal clothing.
Kimono are T-shaped, straight-lined robes worn so that the hem falls to the ankle, with attached collars and long, wide sleeves. Kimono are wrapped around the body, always with the left side over the right (except when dressing the dead for burial) and secured by a sash called an ''obi'', which is tied at the back. Kimono are generally worn with traditional footwear (especially ''zōri'' or ''geta'') and split-toe socks (''tabi'').
Today, kimono are most often worn by women, and on special occasions. Traditionally, unmarried women wore a style of kimono called ''furisode'',〔 with almost floor-length sleeves, on special occasions. A few older women and even fewer men still wear the kimono on a daily basis. Men wear the kimono most often at weddings, tea ceremonies, and other very special or very formal occasions. Professional sumo wrestlers are often seen in the kimono because they are required to wear traditional Japanese dress whenever appearing in public.
==History==

As the kimono has another name, , the earliest kimonos were heavily influenced by traditional Han Chinese clothing, known today as , through Japanese embassies to China which resulted in extensive Chinese culture adoptions by Japan, as early as the 5th century AD.〔 It was during the 8th century, however, that Chinese fashions came into style among the Japanese, and the overlapping collar became particularly women's fashion.〔 During Japan's Heian period (794–1192 AD), the kimono became increasingly stylized, though one still wore a half-apron, called a ''mo'', over it.〔 During the Muromachi age (1392–1573 AD), the ''Kosode'', a single kimono formerly considered underwear, began to be worn without the hakama (trousers, divided skirt) over it, and thus began to be held closed by an ''obi'' "belt".〔 During the Edo period (1603–1867 AD), the sleeves began to grow in length, especially among unmarried women, and the ''Obi'' became wider, with various styles of tying coming into fashion.〔 Since then, the basic shape of both the men’s and women’s kimono has remained essentially unchanged. Kimonos made with exceptional skill from fine materials have been regarded as great works of art.〔
The formal kimono was replaced by the more convenient Western clothes and ''yukata'' as everyday wear. After an edict by Emperor Meiji,〔1871(明治5)年11月12日太政官布告399号〕 police, railroad men and teachers moved to Western clothes. The Western clothes became the army and school uniform for boys. After the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake, kimono wearers often became victims of robbery because they could not run very fast due to the restricting nature of the kimono on the body and geta clogs. The Tokyo Women's & Children's Wear Manufacturers' Association (東京婦人子供服組合) promoted Western clothes. Between 1920 and 1930 the sailor outfit replaced the undivided ''hakama'' in school uniforms for girls. The 1932 fire at Shirokiya's Nihonbashi store is said to have been the catalyst for the decline in kimonos as everyday wear. Kimono-clad Japanese women did not wear panties and several women refused to jump into safety nets because they were ashamed of being seen from below. (It is, however, suggested, that this is an urban myth.)〔() 〕〔(Old Tokyo: Shirokiya Department Store ) 〕
The national uniform, ''Kokumin-fuku'', a type of Western clothes, was mandated for males in 1940. Today most people wear Western clothes and wear the breezier and more comfortable ''yukata'' for special occasions.
In the Western world, kimono-styled women's jackets, similar to a casual cardigan, gained public attention as a popular fashion item in 2014.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「kimono」の詳細全文を読む



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