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Breeches

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Breeches as worn in America in the latter 18th century: Elijah Boardman by Ralph Earl, 1789.
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Breeches as worn in America in the latter 18th century: Elijah Boardman by Ralph Earl, 1789.

Breeches are an item of clothing covering the body from the waist down, with separate coverings for each leg.

The spelling britches reflects a common pronunciation, and is generally used in casual speech to mean "pants". Breeks is a Scots or northern English spelling and pronunciation.

See more at Trousers, Knickers.

Etymology

Breeches is a double plural known since c.1205, from Old English (and before Old French) bréc or breoc, which was already pl. of bróc "garment for the legs and trunk," from the Proto-Germanic root brokiz. Breeches is related to the Old Norse word brók, which shows up in the name of the Viking king Ragnar Lodbrok (originally Loðbrók), Ragnar "Hairy-breeches". The original Proto-Germanic word is related to another Proto-Germanic root, brekan, meaning approximately "broken" or "split off", which is related to modern English "break". It is also related, indirectly to the Latin word bracca, loaned from Celtic which in turn loaned it from Germanic; the Romans, who did not wear pants, referred to Germanic tribes as braccati, "trousers wearing" (actually then merely fabric wrapped around the legs.)

Like other words for similar garments (pants, knickers, shorts; using an obvious plural, as if to reflect it has two legs, as for most synonyms in English, is no longer common in other languages, e.g. the parallel modern Dutch broek), the word breeches has been applied to both outer garments and underwear.

At first it indicated a cloth worn as underwear by both men and women; by the Middle Ages breeches meant "drawers" or "underpants".

In the latter 16th century, breeches began to replace hose (while the German Hosen, also a plural, ousted Bruch) as the general English term for men's lower outer garments, a usage that remained standard until knee-length breeches were replaced for everyday wear by long pantaloons or trousers.

Semantics

The terms breeches or knee-breeches specifically designate the knee-length garments worn by men from the later 16th century to the early 19th century (and into the early 20th century as part of servants' livery).

Breech

The singular meanwhile survived in the metaphorical sense of the part of the body covered by breeches, i.e. posterior, buttocks; paradoxically, the alliterating expression 'bare breech' thus means without any inner or outer breeches.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

This also led to the following:

See also

Hebrew Priests were commanded in the Law of Moses (Exodus 28:42) to wear breeches (basically underwear) when they ministered in the tabernacle: And thou shalt make them linen breeches to cover their nakedness; from the loins even unto the thighs they shall reach

Sources and references

External links

 


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