Dictionary Definition
slipper
Noun
1 low footwear that can be slipped on and off
easily; usually worn indoors [syn: carpet
slipper]
User Contributed Dictionary
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ɪpə(r)
Noun
- A person who slips, has slipped, or is currently slipping.
- A low shoe that can be
slipped on and off easily and is usually worn indoors.
- Get out of bed, put on your slippers, and come downstairs.
Translations
a person who slips, has slipped, or is currently
slipping
- Dutch: slipper , slipster , schuiver , schuifster
a low shoe that can be slipped on and off easily
and is usually worn indoors
Extensive Definition
A slipper, also called a houseshoe, is a soft and
lightweight indoor type of casual footwear.
Domestic Footwear Customs
The word is recorded in English in 1478, deriving from the much older verb to slip, the notion being of footwear that is "slipped" onto the foot.Slippers are frequently made out of soft
materials such as felt,
terrycloth or soft leather, and may or may not be lined. Some
slippers, particularly those meant to be used near pools,
bathrooms, or other wet places, are made of plastic or rubber.
Slippers generally have thin and flexible soles, with a shallow tread meant only to prevent the
wearer from slipping on smooth floors. In contrast, shoes and boots
are generally made of canvas, plastic, rubber, or leather, and
often have thick soles.
Slippers may be shaped like a shoe (foot inserted
through top), or may have no heel, so the foot can be slipped in
the back. They now come in many colourful designs
– cartoon characters, patterns and animals are
often used to decorate this type of footwear.
In Japan, one type of
modern slipper evolved from those made during the Meiji period
(1868 to 1912). The Japanese were accustomed to taking off their
shoes before entering their homes and donning slippers at the
threshold – this was not the case for western cultures,
where customs regarding domesticity differed and slippers were
mainly worn by a home's residents in the evening. For the Japanese
it was problematic for foreigners who did not know or follow their
customs to enter homes with their shoes on. Thus, special slippers
were made for the foreigners to pull over their shoes in order to
keep the indoors sanitary. Such slippers are in widespread use in
Japan today by citizenry and gaijin alike. provide further
demarcation between areas considered clean and unclean within the
household itself.
Slippers also evolved much earlier in India. A
Southern
Song dynasty officer Zhou Qu Fei(1135-1189),stationed in
Quanxi province of China, described two types of slippers he saw in
Jiaozhi (now Vietnam) in his
1178 book
"Ling Wai Dai Da", both types of slippers had leather bottom, one
type has a small post about an inch long with a a mushroom shape
top up front, people wore this slipper by holding the post between
their toes; another type of slipper had a cross shape leather cover
across the top of the leather bottom, Zhou noted that these slipper
looked exactly like the slippers on the feet of arhats in some paintings. He
noted further that the people of Kulam in Southern
India wore a kind of red slipper which looked exactly like the
slipper of arhats in painting.
Nicknames
The term "slipper" is sometimes used
interchangeably with the terms flip-flop and
sandal.
This is especially true where footwear is not customarily worn
indoors; in the Philippines,
India and
Hawaii the
word "slipper" generally refers to the sandal or flip-flop. This
term can be used for sandals or flip-flops even though it is not
truly "correct" per se.
In Scotland, especially on the east coast, they
are often called "baffies". This is thought to derive from the
Scots word 'bachle' meaning to shuffle.
The fictional character Cinderella is
said to have worn glass slippers; in modern parlance they would
probably be called glass mules.
Derek "The Slipper Man" Fan holds the Guinness
Book of World Records for wearing a pair of dress slippers for 23
years straight as of June 30th, 2007.
Use by The Pope
Pope Benedict XVI wears scarlet red leather slippers with white socks. Contrary to initial speculation, the Vatican has announced that the loafers are not made by Prada –they are provided by the pope's personal cobbler.Homonyms
- In hare coursing, a slipper is a person who "slips" or releases dogs to chase the hare. In the UK, slippers were registered and trained by the National Coursing Club (NCC), but coursing is controversial and is being replaced with lure coursing in many countries due to its allegedly inhumane treatment of the hare.
- In Dutch, the word slipper used in its diminutive form 'slippertje' denotes an amorous affair which a married person 'slips' into. The Dutch word may also mean a (plastic) slipper used in humid areas (unlike ordinary slippers)
- EtymologyOnLine – click also on the link to the verb slip
slipper in German: Pantoffel
slipper in Modern Greek (1453-): Παντόφλα
slipper in Spanish: Pantufla
slipper in Esperanto: Pantoflo
slipper in Persian: دمپایی
slipper in French: Chausson
slipper in Korean: 슬리퍼
slipper in Dutch: Pantoffel
slipper in Norwegian: tøffel
slipper in Japanese: スリッパ
slipper in Russian: Тапочки
slipper in Slovenian: Copati
slipper in Swedish: tofflor
slipper in Chinese: 拖鞋