boatwear

English

Etymology

From boat + -wear.

Noun

boatwear (uncountable)

  1. Clothing to be worn in a boat.
    • 1961 November 1, Boot and Shoe Recorder, volume 160, number 11, page 76:
      Boatwear’s growth—Bell said that boatwear and skiwear are so successful today—have “caught on” so well—that the apparel and “extra” items are the reasons one “moves up” to the sport.
    • 1966 January, Better Camping, volume 7, number 1, page 66:
      Stearns Manufacturing Co., Division St. at 30th St., St. Cloud, Minn., offers a line of fashionable buoyant boatwear.
    • 1989, Carl Hiaasen, Skin Tight, New York, N.Y.: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, →ISBN:
      She was wearing a ridiculous white sailor’s suit from Lord and Taylor’s; she even had the cap. It was not ideal boatwear.
    • 1999, Dana Stabenow, So Sure of Death: A Liam Campbell Mystery, Dutton, →ISBN, page 247:
      There are some very fine examples of woven armor, too, and waterproof boatwear made from seal gut.
    • 2001, Libby Purves, This Cruising Life: A Collection of Amusing Stories from the Popular Yachting Monthly Column, London: Adlard Coles Nautical, →ISBN, pages 59–60:
      Arriving in a huge, smart marina with tidy showered people mincing along the pontoons in designer boatwear, the kippers start to feel less like a hidden treasure and more like a shameful secret.
    • 2003, Where to Wear 2004: The Insider’s Guide to London Shopping, New York, N.Y., London: Fairchild & Gallagher, →ISBN, page 87:
      Today the company remains the choice of yahcting[sic] champions and the new flagship shop on Carnaby Street is bursting with top technical boatwear and some fun forays into fashion too.
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