
Athletic shoes, depending on the location and the actual type of footwear, can also go by the name trainers (British English), sandshoes, gym boots or joggers (Australian English) running shoes, runners or gutties (Canadian English, Australian English, Hiberno-English), sneakers, tennis shoes (North American English, Australian English), gym shoes, tennies, sport shoes, sneaks, or takkies (South African English) and rubber shoes (Philippine English).
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Athletic Shoes — Blogs, Pictures, and more on WordPress
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1 or 2 100-200 word posts need daily. Information and pictures of possible blog posts provided. Needs to be familiar, interested in, or willing to learn aboutwww.freelancewritinggigs.com/2007/09/10/blogger-needed-popul...SHOEbuytes
Favorite Athletic Shoes to Jump Start Your Fall Routine ... Welcome to the official blog of Shoebuy.com, the World's Largest Site for Shoes. ...theshoebuyblog.blogspot.com/2007/10/favorite-athletic-shoes-...Athletic-Minded Traveler :: Blog :: Blog Archive " Shoe Buying Hints ...
Blog Home. Kudos to Starbucks " Shoe Buying Hints from the Pro ... Typically an athletic shoe will be one-half to a full size larger than your street shoes. ...www.athleticmindedtraveler.com/blog/?p=52
Athletic shoes, depending on the location and the actual type of footwear, can also go by the name trainers (British English), sandshoes, gym boots or joggers (Australian English) running shoes, runners or gutties (Canadian English, Australian English, Hiberno-English), sneakers, tennis shoes (North American English, Australian English), gym shoes, tennies, sport shoes, sneaks, or takkies (South African English) and rubber shoes (Philippine English).
Use in sports
The term athletic shoes is used for running in a marathon or half marathon, basketball, and tennis (amongst others) but tends to exclude shoes for sports played on grass such as football (futbol) and rugby, which are generally known as "boots", or in North America as cleats.
The shoes themselves are made of flexible compounds, typically featuring a sole made of dense rubber. While the original design was basic, manufacturers have since tailored athletic shoes for the different purposes that they can be used for. Many of these shoes are made up to a very large size because of athletes with large feet (Delin Harick). A specific example of this is the spiked shoe developed for track running.
High-end marathon running shoes will often come in different shapes suited to different foot types, gait etc. Generally, these shoes are divided into neutral, overpronation and underpronation (supination) running shoes to fit the respective foot strike of the runners.
There are a variety of specialized shoes designed for specific uses:
- Racing flats
- Track shoe
- Skate shoes
- Climbing shoe
- Approach shoe
- Wrestling shoes
- Cleats
- Football boot
Etymology
The British English term "trainer" derives from "training shoe". There is evidence 1 that this usage of "trainer" originated as a genericised tradename for a make of training shoe made in 1968 by Gola.
Plimsolls (English English) are indoor athletic shoes, and are also called sneakers in American English and daps in Welsh English. The word "sneaker" is often attributed to Henry Nelson McKinney, an advertising agent for N. W. Ayer & Son, who, in 1917, coined the term because the rubber sole made the shoe stealthy. All other shoes, with the exception of moccasins, were unsuitable for sneaking due to the noise they inevitably produced. However, the word was in use at least as early as 1887, as the Boston Journal of Education made reference to "sneakers" as "the name boys give to tennis shoes".

























