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A plimsoll shoe, plimsoll or plimsole (British English; see other names below) is a type of athletic shoe with a canvas upper and rubber sole developed as beachwear in the 1830s by the Liverpool Rubber Company. Plimsolls had solid rubber soles about 8 or 9mm thick, to which the canvas was glued without coming up the sides (as on trainers). The effect when running was not dissimilar to running without shoes. The shoe was originally, and often still is in parts of the United Kingdom, called a "sand shoe" and acquired the nickname "plimsoll" in the 1870s. This name derived, according to Nicholette Jones's book ''The Plimsoll Sensation'', because the coloured 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. In the UK plimsolls are commonly worn for schools' indoor physical education lessons. Regional terms are common: in Northern Ireland and central Scotland they are sometimes known as ''gutties''; "sannies" (from 'sand shoe') is also used in Scotland.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=sannies – Dictionary of Playground Slang (Online) )〕 In parts of the West Country and Wales they are known as "daps" or "dappers". In London, the home counties, much of the West Midlands, and north west of England they are known as "pumps".〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=BBC Word Map – enter What they wear and Child's soft shoes )〕 There is a widespread belief that "daps" is taken from a factory sign – "Dunlop Athletic Plimsoles" which was called "the DAP factory". However, this seems unlikely as the first citation in the ''Oxford English Dictionary'' of "dap" for a rubber soled shoe is a March 1924 use in the ''Western Daily Press'' newspaper; Dunlop did not acquire the Liverpool Rubber Company (as part of the merger with the Macintosh group of companies) until 1925. 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. ==Outside the United Kingdom== Plimsolls are referred to as: * Australia – sandshoe or more simply with teenagers "canvas shoe", and include the similar shoe, the Dunlop Volley. * Canada – also called running shoes, or runners. * India – white plimsolls are often worn by school children and are known as Keds dating from the 1970s and earlier, and more commonly, as "canvas shoes". The brown version is used by most police and military units as a gym training shoe. * Ireland – also called Penneys shoes/recession shoes if bought in Penneys (Primark). Occasionally called rubber dollies, especially in County Cork. *South Africa – South African slang for shoes with a canvas upper and rubber sole is takkies. *Spain – a "modern" substitute for traditional espadrilles, rubber soled canvas shoes were the standard shoe for decades, up to the 1970s. Trade mark Wamba became a household name, producing a universal unlaced indigo blue canvas shoe, worn by adults and children alike. Still today any kind of trainer shoe is known as Wambas in some parts of the country. *United States – tennis shoes or Chucks (from the Chuck Taylor All-Stars brand). *Gibraltar – Kung-Fu Shoes *Italy – Converse like the name of the famous brand, or "scatola" (meaning "box" in Italian) 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「plimsoll shoe」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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