While reading someone's profile, I realized for possibly the first time that the German word for a sweater, "Pullover", is based on the English words "pull over". I may not have ever thought about the word in that way before. It was just a German word to me, sort of like "palaver" is a just an English word if you don't know its etymology.
I'm also not sure I've heard it used as a word like that in English before (which helps explain why I didn't make the connection), even though wiktionary lists it as English.
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Updated to add:
I just remembered this too: Germans often use a short form of the word, Pulli.
I'm also not sure I've heard it used as a word like that in English before (which helps explain why I didn't make the connection), even though wiktionary lists it as English.
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Updated to add:
I just remembered this too: Germans often use a short form of the word, Pulli.
no subject
Date: 2023-08-08 07:15 am (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2023-08-08 07:54 am (UTC)From:I checked ngrams now:
https://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?content=pullover%2Csweater%2Csweatshirt%2Cblazer&year_start=1800&year_end=2019&corpus=en-2019&smoothing=3
It's less common than "blazer" (which I'm familiar with but never enough to remember what one is) but doesn't seem to be obscure. I probably have seen it used in English before.
Hmm. That reminds me now, of... of... video of guy and cat?... ooh what was that video... which also used some clothing term I was only slightly familiar with... jumper! A jumper as in a sweater.