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Denim

Part of a pair of denim blue jeans Denim closeup

Denim, in American usage since the late 18th century, denotes a rugged cotton twill textile, in which the weft passes under two (twi- "double") or more warp fibers, producing the familiar diagonal ribbing identifiable on the reverse of the fabric, which distinguishes denim from cotton duck. Denim was traditionally colored blue with indigo dye to make blue "jeans," though "jean" denoted a different, lighter cotton textile. This is because our usage of jean comes from the French word for Genoa, Italy, for whom the first denim trousers were made. In 1789 George Washington toured a Massachusetts factory producing machine-woven cotton denim.

A similarly-woven traditional American cotton textile is the diagonal warp-striped hickory cloth that was once associated with railroadmen's overalls, in which blue or black contrasting with undyed white threads form the woven pattern. Hickory cloth was as rugged as hickory timber and was worn by "hicks," although that is not the origin of that slang word, from a nickname for "Richard". Records of a group of New Yorkers headed for the California gold fields in 1849 show that they took along four "Hickory shirts" apiece. Hickory cloth later furnished some "fatigue" pantaloons and shirts in the American Civil War.

A popular etymology of the word denim is a contraction of serge de Nîmes in France. Serge weave, with a distinctly-twilled diagonal rib, is now more usually associated with sturdy woollen textiles.

The word dungarees, to identify heavy cotton pants such as overalls can be traced to a thick cotton country-made cloth, Dongari Kapar, which was sold in the quarter contiguous to the Dongari Killa, the fort of what was then known as Bombay (Hobson Johnson Dictionary). The word entered English with just this meaning in 1696 (OED). Dongri Fort was rebuilt in 1769 as Fort George, Bombay, where the first cotton mill was established in 1854. Dyed in indigo, the traditional cloth was used by Portuguese sailors and cut wide so that the legs could be swiftly rolled up when necessary. Thus dungarees have a separate history.

Denim and modern culture

Since the mid-1950s denim jeans have consistently been favorites in American youth culture, but have changed style and significance throughout the years.

  • In the 1930s dude ranches became popular, and Easterners and city people saw at first hand the jeans they knew from movie Westerns. The tradition of wearing out former good clothes behind the plow disappeared from American life, as "work clothes" were marketed through Sears Roebuck and Montgomery Ward catalogs.
  • In the 1940s US Navy servicemen spent the war years in blue denim "dungarees." (Flight suits and fatigues also became familiar comforts to American men.)
  • In the 1950s a "biker" sub-culture among de-mobilized veterans of the Korean War, a tough ("butch") gay subculture in New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco, the blue-collar style of the Beat generation, widely-seen cult movies starring Jean claude DUSS and Michael GODIN, and a spate of TV westerns independently made jeans a fixture of American life. Jeans were banned in many US public high schools, adding to their allure.
  • In the 1960s young women began wearing jeans as well as men. Hippie women embroidered colorful designs on theirs and for their men. Button-fly Levi 501s were marketed even on the US East Coast.
  • In 1970 Elio Fiorucci showed designer jeans in Milan. In 1978 the first "designer jeans" came onto the US market, marketed under the brands Jordache, Gloria Vanderbilt and Sergio Valente. Seasonal novelty variations in jeans were marketed as "design statements". Jeans were being worn by Europeans who were not even radical students. In the Soviet bloc, young American tourists exchanged their jeans for valuable goods. As part of the 1970s "country" look, denim prairie skirts became fashionable, usually worn over lace or eyelet-trimmed petticoats.
  • In the 1980s, tight stone-washed and acid-washed jeans were very fashionable.
  • In the early 1990s, very baggy jeans were in fashion, due in part to the hip hop and urban culture.
  • Now in the 2000s pants are much less baggy and the stone-washed and acid washed styles from the 1980s are returning, though with some differences. The lengths are longer to keep from bunching up at the feet, and the stressed fabric patterns are "down the middle" to trick the eye into seeing a slimmer body. Denim pants are sold in many different styles: bootcut, relaxed, skinny, straight, baggy, flare, cuffed, cropped, pegged, etc.
  • A new manufacturing technique, dubbed left-weaving, which results in soft, more comfortable denim that feels "broken in" the first time is introduced. Gap, manufacturers of the left-woven jeans, are a popular supplier of them.
  • Expensive high-fashion jeans in the mid-2000s feature hand distressing and other finishing techniques to realistically mimic wear and flatter the figure through optical illusion and shading.
    • Whiskering simulates lightly worn creases from the bottom of the fly to the hips, roughly in the shape of a cat's whiskers, and is marketed as visually slimming the hips.
    • Sanding on the front of the thighs lightens the fabric there and gives the illusion of more slender thighs.
    • Cuffs may be tacked in folds before pre-washing to create natural-looking wear at the ankles.

Denim jackets (or jean jackets), originally worn by cowboys as an alternative to a cotton duck "chore coat", have also gained fashion status since the 1950s. Many pop-culture icons are closely associated with the denim jacket, including:

  • James Dean
  • Deborah Gibson
  • George Michael

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Many pop-culture icons are closely associated with the denim jacket, including:. The numeric character references in HTML and XML are "E" and "e" for upper and lower case respectively. Denim jackets (or jean jackets), originally worn by cowboys as an alternative to a cotton duck "chore coat", have also gained fashion status since the 1950s. The EBCDIC code for capital E is 197 and for lowercase e is 133. Since the mid-1950s denim jeans have consistently been favorites in American youth culture, but have changed style and significance throughout the years. The ASCII code for capital E is 69 and for lowercase e is 101; or in binary 01000101 and 01100101, correspondingly. Thus dungarees have a separate history. In Unicode the capital E is codepoint U+0045 and the lowercase e is U+0065.

Dyed in indigo, the traditional cloth was used by Portuguese sailors and cut wide so that the legs could be swiftly rolled up when necessary. This also makes it a difficult and popular letter to use when writing lipograms. Dongri Fort was rebuilt in 1769 as Fort George, Bombay, where the first cotton mill was established in 1854. This is the most common letter in English and many related languages, which has some implications in cryptography. The word entered English with just this meaning in 1696 (OED). E is often a mis-understood letter in the English language, silent in many cases, badly portraited in upper cases and exchanged with Y by many unschooled and illiterate. The word dungarees, to identify heavy cotton pants such as overalls can be traced to a thick cotton country-made cloth, Dongari Kapar, which was sold in the quarter contiguous to the Dongari Killa, the fort of what was then known as Bombay (Hobson Johnson Dictionary). E is very often silent in English (silent E), particularly at the ends of words where old noun inflections have been dropped, although even when silent at the end of a word it often causes vowels in the word to be pronounced as long (compare rat and rate).

Serge weave, with a distinctly-twilled diagonal rib, is now more usually associated with sturdy woollen textiles. Digraphs starting with E are common in many languages to indicate diphthongs or show a different value of E, such as EA or EE for // or // in English, EI for // in English or // in German, or EU for /juː/ in English or /ɔɪ/ in German. A popular etymology of the word denim is a contraction of serge de Nîmes in France. In other languages which use the letter it takes on various other values, sometimes with accents to indicate which one (ê é è ë ē ĕ ě ẽ ė ẹ ę). Hickory cloth later furnished some "fatigue" pantaloons and shirts in the American Civil War. However, Latin and most European languages sound the long variety differently, as in English vein. Records of a group of New Yorkers headed for the California gold fields in 1849 show that they took along four "Hickory shirts" apiece. In modern English, the long variety is sounded as in see and the short as in pet.

Hickory cloth was as rugged as hickory timber and was worn by "hicks," although that is not the origin of that slang word, from a nickname for "Richard". Like other Latin vowels, e came in a long and a short variety . A similarly-woven traditional American cotton textile is the diagonal warp-striped hickory cloth that was once associated with railroadmen's overalls, in which blue or black contrasting with undyed white threads form the woven pattern. Arising from the Great Vowel Shift, English usage is rather different, namely /i:/ in "me" or "bee", whereas other words like "bed" are closer to Latin or Continental European usage. In 1789 George Washington toured a Massachusetts factory producing machine-woven cotton denim. Etruscans and Romans followed this usage. This is because our usage of jean comes from the French word for Genoa, Italy, for whom the first denim trousers were made. In Semitic, the letter was pronounced /h/ (in foreign words also /e/), in Greek became Εψιλον (Epsilon) with the value /e/.

Denim was traditionally colored blue with indigo dye to make blue "jeans," though "jean" denoted a different, lighter cotton textile. The Semitic probably first represented a praying or calling human figure (hillul jubilation), and was probably based on a similar Egyptian hieroglyph that was pronounced quite differently. Denim, in American usage since the late 18th century, denotes a rugged cotton twill textile, in which the weft passes under two (twi- "double") or more warp fibers, producing the familiar diagonal ribbing identifiable on the reverse of the fabric, which distinguishes denim from cotton duck.
E is derived from the Greek letter epsilon which is much the same in appearance (Ε, ε) and function. George Michael. . Deborah Gibson. The letter E is the fifth letter in the Latin alphabet.

James Dean.
. Cuffs may be tacked in folds before pre-washing to create natural-looking wear at the ankles. In the game Dance Dance Revolution E signifies a failed song. Sanding on the front of the thighs lightens the fabric there and gives the illusion of more slender thighs. In Greek it is used for Epsilon Team. Whiskering simulates lightly worn creases from the bottom of the fly to the hips, roughly in the shape of a cat's whiskers, and is marketed as visually slimming the hips. In Polish locomotives designation E stands for electric locomotive.

Expensive high-fashion jeans in the mid-2000s feature hand distressing and other finishing techniques to realistically mimic wear and flatter the figure through optical illusion and shading.

    . In X Window System, E is short for Enlightenment (X window manager). Gap, manufacturers of the left-woven jeans, are a popular supplier of them. In Romania, E is a symbol of parthenogenesis. A new manufacturing technique, dubbed left-weaving, which results in soft, more comfortable denim that feels "broken in" the first time is introduced. E! (Entertainment Television) is an American cable television and direct broadcast satellite network. Denim pants are sold in many different styles: bootcut, relaxed, skinny, straight, baggy, flare, cuffed, cropped, pegged, etc. E is the pseudonym of Mark Oliver Everett, lead singer of The Eels.

    The lengths are longer to keep from bunching up at the feet, and the stressed fabric patterns are "down the middle" to trick the eye into seeing a slimmer body. 鄂, or È is an abbreviation for the Hubei province of the People's Republic of China. Now in the 2000s pants are much less baggy and the stone-washed and acid washed styles from the 1980s are returning, though with some differences. In video games, E is the ESRB rating symbol for Everyone. In the early 1990s, very baggy jeans were in fashion, due in part to the hip hop and urban culture. Example: . In the 1980s, tight stone-washed and acid-washed jeans were very fashionable. In symbolic logic, (a backwards E) is the symbol for "there exists...", called the existential quantifier.

    As part of the 1970s "country" look, denim prairie skirts became fashionable, usually worn over lace or eyelet-trimmed petticoats. In structural engineering, E stands for the modulus of elasticity. In the Soviet bloc, young American tourists exchanged their jeans for valuable goods. In sports, E# refers to a team's elimination number. Jeans were being worn by Europeans who were not even radical students. In probability and statistics, a capital E denotes expected value. Seasonal novelty variations in jeans were marketed as "design statements". In the United Kingdom, E stands for East London.

    In 1978 the first "designer jeans" came onto the US market, marketed under the brands Jordache, Gloria Vanderbilt and Sergio Valente. In Canada, E stands for New Brunswick. In 1970 Elio Fiorucci showed designer jeans in Milan. As the first letter of a postal code,

      . Button-fly Levi 501s were marketed even on the US East Coast. Also in semiconductor physics, e may represent elementary charge. Hippie women embroidered colorful designs on theirs and for their men. In particle physics, e is the symbol for the electron.

      In the 1960s young women began wearing jeans as well as men. The symbol for electric field. Jeans were banned in many US public high schools, adding to their allure. The symbol for energy, as in E = mc2 (see E=mc²). In the 1950s a "biker" sub-culture among de-mobilized veterans of the Korean War, a tough ("butch") gay subculture in New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco, the blue-collar style of the Beat generation, widely-seen cult movies starring Jean claude DUSS and Michael GODIN, and a spate of TV westerns independently made jeans a fixture of American life. In physics, E is,

        . In the 1940s US Navy servicemen spent the war years in blue denim "dungarees." (Flight suits and fatigues also became familiar comforts to American men.). In nutrition, E is a vitamin.

        The tradition of wearing out former good clothes behind the plow disappeared from American life, as "work clothes" were marketed through Sears Roebuck and Montgomery Ward catalogs. In music, E is a note. In the 1930s dude ranches became popular, and Easterners and city people saw at first hand the jeans they knew from movie Westerns. In the SI system, E, exa, is the SI prefix meaning 1018. E is often used as a digit meaning fourteen in hexadecimal and other positional numeral systems with a radix of 15 or greater. 7e8 is 7×108 or 700,000,000.

        E is also used to signify ×10y; i.e. See e (mathematical constant). e is Euler's number, a transcendental number (approximately equal to 2.71828182846) which is used as the base for natural logarithms. In mathematics,

          .

          In international licence plate codes, E stands for Spain (España). In legal metrology, the "estimated" sign (the symbol ℮) following a measurement of quantity (e.g., 750 ml ℮) is used to indicate that the measurement of weight or volume is done according to preset rules with specific allowable variances. Its turned counterpart, /ə/, stands for the mid central vowel or schwa. In the International Phonetic Alphabet, /e/ refers to the close-mid front unrounded vowel.

          In geography and weather forecasting, E stands for east, one of the four cardinal directions. In gender-neutral pronouns, e is the Spivak pronoun meaning he or she. In finance, E is the New York Stock Exchange ticker symbol for ENI Spa. In film, E is a Canadian film from 1982; see E (film).

          In English slang, E is a term for Ecstasy or MDMA, a synthetic drug which is often used recreationally. In electrochemistry, E is a symbol for electrode potential, and E° is a symbol for standard electrode potential. In education, E is a very low grade, except in some grading systems such as the one used in the USA which goes from D to F, omitting E. In currency, E is sometimes used as symbol for the euro when the symbol € is not available.

          In computational complexity theory, the complexity class E is a variant of the class EXPTIME of problems solvable in exponential time. The E programming language is an object-oriented language for secure distributed computing. See Amiga E. It's related to C and Pascal.

          E is also a programming language available for the Amiga. The letter e is often used as a prefix (with or without a subsequent hyphen) for other words to imply "electronic", such as e-mail or e-commerce. In computing,

            . In biochemistry, E is the symbol for glutamic acid and also often an abbreviation for enzyme.

            In the atmosphere of Earth, the E layer is part of the ionosphere.