gym tunic - significado y definición. Qué es gym tunic
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Qué (quién) es gym tunic - definición

LONG DRAPED GARMENT WORN BY WOMEN OF ANCIENT GREECE; OFTEN OPEN ON ONE SIDE, WITH A DEEP FOLD AT THE TOP, AND FASTENED ON BOTH SHOULDERS
Peplus; Peplum dress; Peplum (dress); Peplum (clothing); Peplum tunic; Peplum (tunic); Ancient Greek tunic; Greek tunic; Ancient Greek dress
  • chiton]], c. 460 BC

Hoosier Gym         
  • Exterior of Hoosier Gym in 2017.
FORMER HIGH SCHOOL GYM AND FILMING LOCATION
The Historic Hoosier Gym
The Hoosier Gym is a basketball gymnasium, museum, and community center located in Knightstown, Indiana. It is famous for being a filming location for the 1986 basketball movie Hoosiers, starring Gene Hackman and Dennis Hopper.
Último Dragón Gym Championship         
PROFESSIONAL WRESTLING CHAMPIONSHIP
Ultimo Dragon Gym Championship
The Último Dragón Gym Championship was the top title in the Japanese professional wrestling promotion Toryumon. As it was a professional wrestling championship, the championship was not won not by actual competition, but by a scripted ending to a match determined by the bookers and match makers.
tunic         
SIMPLE T-SHAPED OR SLEEVELESS GARMENT, USUALLY UNFITTED, OF ARCHAIC ORIGIN
Tunics; Roman tunic
¦ noun
1. a loose sleeveless garment reaching to the thigh or knees.
a gymslip.
2. a close-fitting short coat worn as part of a uniform.
3. Biology & Anatomy an integument or membrane enclosing or lining an organ or participle
Botany any of the concentric layers of a plant bulb, e.g. an onion.
Origin
OE, from OFr. tunique or L. tunica.

Wikipedia

Peplos

A peplos (Greek: ὁ πέπλος) is a body-length garment established as typical attire for women in ancient Greece by circa 500 BC, during the late Archaic and Classical period. It was a long, rectangular cloth with the top edge folded down about halfway, so that what was the top of the rectangle was now draped below the waist, and the bottom of the rectangle was at the ankle. One side of the peplos could be left open, or pinned or sewn together. In Latin and in a Roman context, it could be called a palla.

It should not be confused with the Ionic chiton, which was a piece of fabric folded over and sewn together along the longer side to form a tube. The Classical garment is represented in Greek vase painting from the 5th century BC and in the metopes of temples in Doric order.

Spartan women continued to wear the peplos much later in history than other Greek cultures. It was also shorter and with slits on the side causing other Greeks to call them phainomērídes (φαινομηρίδες), the "thigh-showers".