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  2. Sandal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandal

    In Greek, the names referred to particular styles of women's sandals rather than being the general word for the category of footwear. Similarly, in Latin, the name was also used for slippers, the more common term for Roman sandals being solea, whence English sole. The English words sand and sandalwood are both false cognates.

  3. Caligae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caligae

    It was laced up the center of the foot and onto the top of the ankle. The Spanish scholar Isidore of Seville believed that the name "caliga" derived from the Latin callus ("hard leather"), or else from the fact that the boot was laced or tied on (ligere). Strapwork styles varied from maker to maker and region to region.

  4. Huarache (shoe) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huarache_(shoe)

    The sandals are believed related to the cactle or cactli, of Náhuatl origin. The name "huarache" is derived from the Purépecha language term kwarachi, and directly translates into English as sandal. [citation needed] Early forms have been found in and traced to the countryside farming communities of Jalisco, Michoacan, Guanajuato and Yucatan.

  5. Flip-flops - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flip-flops

    This is hypothesized to have come from the Telugu word ceppu (చెప్పు), from Proto-Dravidian *keruppu, [9] [10] meaning "sandal". In some parts of Latin America, flip-flops are called chanclas. [11] Throughout the world, they are also known by a variety of other names, including slippers in the Bahamas, Hawai‘i, Jamaica and ...

  6. Calceus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calceus

    The Latin word calceus derives from calx ("heel") and the usually Grecian suffix -eus, meaning essentially "heely" or "thing for the heel". It is frequently taken loosely as the general Latin word for any laced and covered shoe [1] distinguished from sandals, slippers, and boots. Theodor Mommsen even considered it to sometimes intend sandals as ...

  7. Soccus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soccus

    A comedic actor in socci [1]. A soccus (pl. socci) or sýkkhos (Ancient Greek: σύκχος, pl. sýkkhoi), sometimes given in translation as a slipper, was a loosely fitting slip-on shoe [2] in Ancient Greece and Rome with a leather sole and separate leather, bound without the use of hobnails.