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English
Etymology
From court + -wear.
Noun
courtwear (uncountable)
- Clothing to be worn in a sports court.
1972 July 29, Sophy Burnham, “Tennis: A whole new ball game”, in Saturday Review, volume LV, number 31, page 46, column 1:(Yet, ironically, many of the newer, less well-heeled players seem to be even more dedicated to white attire than do veteran players, and tennis’s arrivés are often offended by other hues of courtwear.)
1977 March 7, Marilyn Thelen, “Sports is not only how you play the game but what you wear”, in The Christian Science Monitor, page B16:Sportswear looks continue to influence women's courtwear with wrapped or knife-pleated skirts, bolero tie-blouses worn over bandeau bras, and sweatery knits.
1981, Bonnie August, Ellen Count, “Dress Thin to Win: Active Sportswear”, in The Complete Bonnie August’s Dress Thin System: 642 + Ways to Correct Figure Faults with Clothes, New York, N.Y.: Rawson, Wade Publishers, Inc., →ISBN, page 200:Basic Dress Thin courtwear for any lower-torso proportion problem: smoothly tailored shorts (left) with vertical pockets, a flat fly, no cuffs—nothing to break the line or create bulk below the waist.
1996 March 25, Susan Martin, “Tennis: Whites to brights”, in The Buffalo News, page C-8:In Between “courtwear” is a blend of cotton, polyester and Spandex that creates a layered look under skirts and tops.
1997 September 30, Malcolm Parry, “In the guestbook at Duthie’s 40th birthday”, in The Vancouver Sun, volume 112, number 121, page B5:A few sporting fellows wore striped blazers and cream slacks, and a dozen women modelled flapper ensembles and courtwear from plus-fours-attired Ivan Sayer’s garment museum.
1998 November 15, Elaine Glusac, “The athletic aesthetic”, in Chicago Tribune:“People are dressing more casual on a daily basis and they come to us looking for clean, classic athletic clothes that are comfortable,” says Andrea Huff, apparel marketing director for Reebok, which outfits Williams in nightclub-worthy courtwear including silver shifts.
2011 June 20, “Tennis brights”, in Evening Standard, page 28:Wimbledon will waive its white-only rule for the Olympic tennis next year. Karen Dacre serves up sizzling courtwear for colour converts
- Clothing to be worn in a court of law.
1996, Bernard Schwartz, Decision: How the Supreme Court Decides Cases, New York, N.Y., Oxford: Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 20:It was perhaps unchivalrous to complain when the first women Justices began to brighten their courtwear with what Time called “modish, attention-getting dickeys.”
1996, E. L. Wyrick, Power in the Blood, New York, N.Y.: St. Martin’s Press, →ISBN, page 60:Forty-five minutes later I walked into the courthouse in Braxton. […] White was dressed in a white turtleneck shirt adorned with three gold necklaces. That courtwear was a poor enough choice, but was boundlessly overshadowed by his coat.
1999 November 22, Clare Dyer, “A very public wigging”, in The Guardian, page 11:People interviewed for the Paths to Justice survey were not asked about judges’ courtwear, but they gave their views anyway.
2002 April 26, Paul Cheston, “Most dispiriting trial”, in Evening Standard, page 4:To fit in with the strictures of a European court ruling since the trial of two 10-year-old boys accused of killing three-year-old James Bulger, the judge and barristers, clerk and ushers had to dump their normal courtwear for lounge suits.
Further reading