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  2. Trousers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trousers

    In North America, Australia and South Africa, [7] pants is the general category term, whereas trousers (sometimes slacks in Australia and North America) often refers more specifically to tailored garments with a waistband, belt-loops, and a fly-front. In these dialects, elastic-waist knitted garments would be called pants, but not trousers (or ...

  3. Shorts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shorts

    The British English term, short trousers, is used, only for shorts that are a short version of ordinary trousers (i.e., pants or slacks in American English). For example: tailored shorts, often lined, as typically worn as part of a school uniform for boys up to their early teens, [1] [2] [3] and by servicemen and policemen in tropical climates.

  4. Slim-fit pants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slim-fit_pants

    Pants, which had come to mean tight-fitting trousers, but now just a synonym, fitted more loosely from the 1840s onwards as mass-production replaced tailoring. Beginning in the Edwardian era and continuing into the 1920s, baggy "Oxford" or "collegiate" trousers and plus fours were fashionable among the younger generation.

  5. Pampers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pampers

    In fact, the first patent for the use of double gussets in a diaper was in 1973 by P&G. [1] In 1982, Pampers introduced an elasticized wingfold diaper with elastic leg gathers and refastenable tapes which was a cross between the early 1960s design and the modern hourglass shape, a feature that was first introduced on Luvs in 1976 and evolved ...

  6. Ping the Elastic Man - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ping_the_Elastic_Man

    Ping the Elastic Man (also named Here Comes Ping the Elastic Man) was a British comic strip that appeared in The Beano from 1938 to 1940. The comic was about a boy who could stretch his limbs as if they were made of elastic. It was created by Hugh McNeill.

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