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[[File:Clogs.jpg|thumb|Some clogs, yesterday]]
{{a|work|[[File:Clogs.jpg|thumb|center|450px|Some clogs, yesterday.]]}}{{d|Clogs|/klɒgz/|n| (Fr: ''Sabots''}} <br>
A form of robust wooden shoe originating in the low countries, before it found forensic fame and fortune as an arcane metaphor in the [[courts of chancery]], where one tries where possible to avoid [[Clog on the equity of redemption|clogs on the equity of redemption]].
Stout wooden shoes originating in the low countries. Unfashionable in the [[courts of chancery]], where one has always tried, where possible, to ''avoid'' [[Clog on the equity of redemption|clogs on the equity of redemption]]. Clogs — in French, ''les [[Sabotage|sabots]]'' — were more fashionable amongst 19th century Parisienne hand-weavers, but not for wearing so much as for throwing angrily into the gears of those new-fangled automatic [[Jacquard loom|looms invented by Joseph Jacquard]] with the goal of buggering them up, in a rather [[Cnut]]-like effort to save their livelihoods. Mischievous French clog-throwing became widespread for a time and was known as “''[[sabotage]]''”. Long-term, it didn’t do ''les saboteurs'' much good. You can’t fight progress.


{{seealso}}
{{sa}}
*[[Jacquard loom]]
*[[Equity of redemption]]
*[[Equity of redemption]]
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Latest revision as of 19:37, 24 February 2021

Office anthropology™
Some clogs, yesterday.
The JC puts on his pith-helmet, grabs his butterfly net and a rucksack full of marmalade sandwiches, and heads into the concrete jungleIndex: Click to expand:
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Clogs
/klɒgz/ (n.)

Stout wooden shoes originating in the low countries. Unfashionable in the courts of chancery, where one has always tried, where possible, to avoid clogs on the equity of redemption. Clogs — in French, les sabots — were more fashionable amongst 19th century Parisienne hand-weavers, but not for wearing so much as for throwing angrily into the gears of those new-fangled automatic looms invented by Joseph Jacquard with the goal of buggering them up, in a rather Cnut-like effort to save their livelihoods. Mischievous French clog-throwing became widespread for a time and was known as “sabotage”. Long-term, it didn’t do les saboteurs much good. You can’t fight progress.

See also