What do you mean by thong?

What do you mean by thong?

1 : a strip especially of leather or hide. 2 : a sandal held on the foot by a thong fitting between the toes and connected to a strap across the top or around the sides of the foot.

What is a thong in British English?

thong in British English (θɒŋ ) noun. a thin strip of leather or other material, such as one used for lashing things together. a whip or whiplash, esp one made of leather.

Where did the word thong originated?

thong (n.) Old English þwong, þwang “narrow strip of leather” (used as a cord, band, strip, etc.), from Proto-Germanic *thwang- (source also of Old Norse þvengr), from PIE root *twengh- “to press in on, to restrain” (source also of Old English twengan “to pinch, squeeze”).

What language is thong?

From Middle English thong, thwong, thwang, from Old English þwong, þwang, þweng, þwæng (“thong, band, strap, cord, strip of leather; phylactery”), from Proto-West Germanic *þwangi, from Proto-Germanic *þwangiz, *þwanguz (“coercion, constraint, band, clamp, strap”), from Proto-Indo-European *twenk- (“to squeeze, press.

Why do men wear thongs?

“They’re about containment. A thong is designed to contain genitals with minimum fabric and just enough support. They allow maximum exposure of the body as well as room for movement and air circulation,” he says. “String undies for men must fit perfectly and, when they do, feel like wearing nearly nothing.

What does thong mean in America?

thong in American English used as a lace, strap, etc. 2. a whiplash, as of plaited strips of hide. 3. a kind of sandal consisting usually of a flat rubber sole held on the foot by a strap slipped between the big toe and the toe next to it.

Why is it called a G String?

The name is short for “Groin” string. Yes, ew. It was invented as the absolute minimum fabric to cover your anus/groin and still be legal to work in a strip club (in cities that outlaw complete nudity).

What is a thong called in Australia?

pluggers
They are called thongs (sometimes pluggers) in Australia, jandals (originally a trademarked name derived from “Japanese sandals”) in New Zealand, slops or “visplakkies” in South Africa and Zimbabwe, and tsinelas in the Philippines (or, in some Visayan localities, “smagol”, from the word smuggled).

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