It was unharmed, but it moved with dragging steps, much like a tavern moccasin soaked in rum. The message was that if they were lucky enough to get a foot in the door, they should make sure it was covered in an apartment or allocable moccasin. These sample phrases are automatically selected from various online information sources to reflect the current use of the word “moccasin”. The views expressed in the examples do not represent the views of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us your feedback. If you are a lazy person, avoid working as much as possible, preferring to relax instead. And if you are too lazy to tie up your own shoes, you can instead wear moccasins – slippers without laces. perhaps the abbreviation of Landloafer, from the German Landläufer tramp, from Land + Läufer runner You can dress it with a boot, put it with moccasins or sneakers. Down here, with a piece of rabbit brain, a kind of hideous little slacker.
If you`re a slacker at work, your coworkers will resent you for doing nothing while they`re doing their job. Moccasins like to laze or “spend time idle and aimlessly.” People will call you a moccasin if you spend most of your time lying down, take frequent breaks for snacks and naps, or obviously avoid something similar to hard work. This name has been used since the mid-1800s, but its origin is unclear. The shoe called moccasin gets its name because it can be easily put on, without the work of laces and knots. But how could he find work – he, a simple street lazy, and so alone in London as if it were a desert. “A lazy moccasin that reads a penny terribly,” I thought, glancing at him, and then at the title of his book. It allows me to feel comfortable without looking like a full-time moccasin. At the same time, he insisted that his daughters tell him that he would be “beaten like this” because he always wore “pompom loafers” with his undercover uniform.
Slip-on shoes are shoes without laces. The most commonly seen style is called a moccasin or slipper, with a moccasin construction. They began to appear as casual shoes in Norway in the mid-1930s, although they gained popularity until they were worn in salon suits. They are mainly worn by women, although men also wear the shoes. I`m still a moccasin; Jim is a highly regarded member of the sweetest society; And that`s what happened. Production from Aurlandsko to Aurland circa 1950.Source: National Library of Norway A groom from Bjerkeland near Bergen in traditional costume and slippers near Bergen, photo before 1870.Source: Marcus Selmer Traditional costumes and shoes from the inner district of Sogn. Painting by Johan Fredrik Eckersberg, printed in 1861.