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Etymology

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From Greek τσαρούχι (tsaroúchi)

Noun

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tsarouchi (plural tsarouchis or tsarouchi)

  1. Traditional Greek leather shoe with pompom, now worn only by the evzonoi.
    • 1956, Gerald Durrell, My Family and Other Animals, Penguin, page 47:
      His trousers, patched like his coat, dropped over a pair of scarlet charouhias, leather shoes with upturned toes decorated with a large black-and-white pompon.
    • 1977, Linda Suny Myrsiades, “Greek Resistance Theatre in World War II”, in The Drama Review: TDR[1], volume 21, number 1, page 102:
      Here the struggle of Greece is fought with half a tsarouchi (the distinctive pompommed clogs worn by mountain fighters), rags, a loaf of bread, a handful of corn, and with home-made guns, axes, and poles."