A sock is a knitted garment for enclosing the human foot and/or lower leg, which is designed to:
Sock is also the term given to the layer of leather or other material covering the insole of a shoe. When only part of the insole is covered, leaving the forepart visible, this is known as a half-sock.
Socks are designed for wear with footwear that covers the entire foot, such as athletic shoes, boots, or dress shoes. They are sometimes worn with open-toed shoes, such as sandals, but the practice is considered somewhat unfashionable (and can earn the wearer the label of shoebie). Socks are also frequently worn without shoes, typically indoors. The most commonly known "Tube Socks" were invented by Thomas Kelly and Hugh Ryan, in 1875.
The average foot has 250,000 sweat glands, and the average pair gives off about half a pint (almost 250mL) of perspiration per day. Socks help to absorb this sweat and draw it to areas where air can wick the perspiration away. In cold environments, socks help to remove the moisture given off by one's feet, decreasing the risks for frostbite.
Socks are usually made from cotton, wool, or polypropylene and less commonly from possum fur or nylon. They come in many colors, though are typically dark for formal attire and white for athletic or casual attire. Colored socks may be a key part of a sport team's uniform. For example, different colored socks come in handy when struggling for a ball in a soccer match at times when several players become bunched. A teammate’s leg can be distinguished from the legs of an opposing player legs based on the color and pattern of their socks.
Sock lengths vary, from ankle-high to knee level. Many athletes wear just-below-the-knee socks, such as in soccer, football, and occasionally basketball. Sport fencers wear extra-long socks that reach above the knee. Other styles of socks include crew socks, mid-calf, and bare socks. A toe sock (also known as a digital sock*) wraps each toe individually. In the United States, Singapore, and Hong Kong, secondary schools in particular, ankle socks have become more popular for wear with athletic shoes, especially by teenagers and young adults.
Although socks are sold in pairs, the two socks are usually the same. Mismatched socks are popularly a symbol of absent-mindedness or eccentricity. With formal or semiformal wear, proper ettiquette requires the sock colour to match the colour of the shoes and/or pants. Wearing white socks with a dark suit is a typical fashion mistake of those who wear suits infrequently.
Socks can also be used for alternative purposes, including:
In western culture one of a pair of socks is popularly understood to disappear, usually at some point during the washing and drying process, leaving the owner with many socks without mates. There are any number of humorous theories to "explain" the disappearance.
It has also been noted that disposing of a lonesome sock virtually guarantees that its long-lost mate will re-appear the next day.
Some with a ruthlessly logical approach to life may solve this problem by taking every sock in the house to a local charity and then purchasing a sufficient number of replacement socks in a limited number of styles and colors, thus maximizing the odds of finding matching socks in the laundry.
Some with a less ruthless but still logical outlook on life will simply buy multiple pairs of the exact same kind of sock, down to any pattern the sock may exhibit.
In 2004 and the early 1980s, mismatched socks were a fashion statementThis continued into 2005 [http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/05/09/miss.match.
It is said, for example, in a popular campfire song, that black socks never get dirty. The song claims that "The longer you wear them the blacker they get."
Used socks also seem to be a popular item for sale on the auction site eBay.
One excuse sometimes given by a person found to be wearing a non-matching pair of socks is that an unspecified scientific study showed that more people who are run over in the street are wearing matching socks than non-matching ones. The spurious relationship is then suggested that this proves that people who wear odd socks are less likely to be run over while walking.
جورب | Strumpf | Calcetín | Chaussette (vêtement) | Sok (kledingstuk) | 靴下 | Sokk | Skarpetki | Meia | Носок | Sock | Sukka | Strumpor