Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun In Spanish-speaking countries, a kind of sandal or low shoe with a hemp or rush sole and cloth upper.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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While in Argentina he came across a shoe called the alpargata , a kind of espadrille, and thought it would sell well in the United States.
Doing Good by Shoeing Well Philip Delves Broughton 2011
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It was during his globe trekking adventures, in Argentina, that he first stumbled across the idea for his next venture, a farmers shoe called the alpargata.
unknown title 2011
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If his entrepreneurial insights are not original, he repackages them as well as he does the alpargata, taking the familiar and making it fresh.
Doing Good by Shoeing Well Philip Delves Broughton 2011
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The original TOMS shoe was based on the Argentine alpargata, mostly worn by farmers and "common people," as my friends in Argentina say.
Blake Mycoskie: TOMS Shoes Accepts the Secretary of State's 2009 ACE Award Blake Mycoskie 2010
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The original TOMS shoe was based on the Argentine alpargata, mostly worn by farmers and "common people," as my friends in Argentina say.
Blake Mycoskie: TOMS Shoes Accepts the Secretary of State's 2009 ACE Award Blake Mycoskie 2010
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Compelled to take some personal responsibility, Mycoskie set out to create a shoe inspired by the traditional Argentine alpargata, and for every pair of shoes sold, one pair of TOMS Shoes would be given to a child in need.
Mihal Freinquel: When Celebs Do Good: Charlize Theron and TOMS Shoes 2009
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Compelled to take some personal responsibility, Mycoskie set out to create a shoe inspired by the traditional Argentine alpargata, and for every pair of shoes sold, one pair of TOMS Shoes would be given to a child in need.
Mihal Freinquel: TOMS Shoes: A Spring/Summer 2010 Preview of Friendly, Fashionable Footwear 2009
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The original TOMS shoe was based on the Argentine alpargata, mostly worn by farmers and "common people," as my friends in Argentina say.
Blake Mycoskie: TOMS Shoes Accepts the Secretary of State's 2009 ACE Award 2009
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He returned to New York City, took the design for an Argentinian shoe called an alpargata, and redesigned it for the U.S. market - replacing the traditional rope sole with rubber for durability.
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MYCOSKIE: But I said, I'm going to take your -- the alpargata, the Argentine national shoe that farmers have been wearing for hundreds of years, I was going to redesign it and every time I sold one, I was going to bring one back to these children in Argentina.
jinglebelljosie commented on the word alpargata
n. a canvass shoe or sandal
October 23, 2008
qms commented on the word alpargata
Throughout all the Catalan hills
They're worn by who talks and who tills.
Though all social strata
May wear alpargata
The well-born will say "espadrilles."
June 10, 2016
Tinfangwarble commented on the word alpargata
In the Wordnik 'word of the day' it says: "The word alpargata' may derive from an Arabic word for a kind of sandal." But I wonder if the etymology is closer to espadrille. In online etymology it has: "espadrille (n.) shoe with soles of hemp-rope (originally worn in the Pyrenees), 1892, from French espadrille (17c.), from Provençal espardillo, from Latin spartum "Spanish broom, Spanish grass," a plant of Iberia and North Africa that produced a fiber used to make mats, nets, ropes, etc., from Greek sparton "rope made of spartos" ("Spanish broom"), from PIE *spr-to-, from root *sper- (2) "to turn, twist" (see Sparta)."
What do you think?
June 10, 2016
qms commented on the word alpargata
It is my understanding that alpargata and espadrille do share ancestry. The Wkipedia entry for Espadrille contains the following:
June 10, 2016