While my friends and I were out cavorting at and around Hendrix Formal, I spotted a woman wearing a pair of stiletto heels unlike any I had ever seen. Two thoughts came to my mind at that moment: how/why do women wear those things, and why are they called stilettos?
In the AHD, the definition for stiletto is "a small dagger with a slender tapering blade" or "a small sharp-pointed instrument that makes eyelet holes in needlework". The OED has a similar definition: "a short dagger with a blade in proportion to its breadth." The OED also states that the word stiletto was not used to describe the size of a high heel shoe until 1953.
Stiletto is an Italian diminutive of stilo, which means dagger. Stilo came from the Latin word stilus, which means stylus or spike.
Monday, February 2, 2009
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