Grecian slippers - meaning and definition. What is Grecian slippers
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What (who) is Grecian slippers - definition

Grecian bends; Grecian Bend

Grecian Coffee House         
  • After nearly 200 years, the coffee house closed in 1843 and was remodelled into a public house
FORMER COFFEE HOUSE IN LONDON
The Grecian
The Grecian Coffee House was a coffee house, first established in about 1665 at Wapping Old Stairs in London, England, by a Greek former mariner called George Constantine.
Grecian (barque)         
SAILING SHIP WRECKED IN 1850 OFF PORT ADELAIDE
User:Doug butler/Grecian (barque)
Grecian was a sailing ship which was wrecked in a storm off Port Adelaide, South Australia in October 1850.
Grecian (1824 ship)         
SHIP WRECKED ON THE NEW SOUTH WALES COAST IN 1864
Grecian (1824)
Grecian was a sailing ship built in England in 1824. She was wrecked on Nine Mile Beach, New South Wales during a gale on 30 April 1864.

Wikipedia

Grecian bend

The Grecian bend was a term applied first to a stooped posture which became fashionable c. 1820, named after the gracefully-inclined figures seen in the art of ancient Greece. It was also the name of a dance move introduced to polite society in America just before the American Civil War. The "bend" was considered very daring at the time.

The stoop or the silhouette created by the fashion in women's dress for corsets, crinolettes and bustles by 1869 was also called the Grecian bend. Contemporary illustrations often show a woman with a large bustle and a very small parasol, bending forward.

The term was also given to those who suffered from decompression sickness, or "the bends", due to working in caissons during the building of the Brooklyn Bridge in New York City. The name was given because afflicted individuals characteristically arched their backs in the same manner as the then popular "Grecian bend" fashion.