sweater
See also: Sweater
English
    

A man’s sweater.
Etymology
    
From Middle English swetere, equivalent to sweat + -er.
Pronunciation
    
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈswɛtə/
 - (General American) IPA(key): /ˈswɛtɚ/, /-ɾɚ/
 Audio (GA) (file) - (General Australian) IPA(key): /ˈswetə/
 - Rhymes: -ɛtə(ɹ)
 - Hyphenation: sweat‧er
 
Noun
    
sweater (plural sweaters)
- A knitted jacket or jersey, usually of thick wool, worn by athletes before or after exercise.
- Synonym: sweatshirt
 
 - (US) A similar garment worn for warmth.
- 1997, “Autumn Sweater”, in I Can Hear the Heart Beating as One, performed by Yo La Tengo:
- We could slip away / Wouldn't that be better? / Me with nothing to say / And you in your autumn sweater
 
 
 -  One who sweats (produces sweat).
- Synonym: perspirer
 
- 2007, John T. James, A Sea of Broken Hearts: Patient Rights in a Dangerous Profit-Driven Health Care System, →ISBN, page 29:
- The cardiologist who administered Alex's exercise stress test on August 21 observed during that test that Alex was a profuse sweater.
 
 
 - One who or that which causes to sweat.
- 1906, Chesterton, Charles Dickens, chapter 3:
- We learn of the cruelty of some school or child-factory from journalists; we learn it from inspectors, we learn it from doctors, we learn it even from shame-stricken schoolmasters and repentant sweaters; but we never learn it from the children; we never learn it from the victims.
 
 
 - A diaphoretic remedy.
 - (historical) An exploitative middleman who subcontracted piece work in the tailoring trade.
- 1894, New York (State) Bureau of Mediation and Arbitration, Annual Report (volumes 7-8, page 158)
- If the piecework system had not existed there never would have been any sweatees. The men who are sweaters, I am sorry to say, are men who formerly belonged to our union.
 
 
 - 1894, New York (State) Bureau of Mediation and Arbitration, Annual Report (volumes 7-8, page 158)
 - (archaic) One who sweats coins, i.e. removes small portions by shaking them.
 - (UK, obsolete) A London street ruffian in Queen Anne's time who prodded passers-by with his sword-point.
- William Lecky, quoted in 1965, Gilbert Geis, Juvenile Gangs (page 6)
- Among them were the "sweaters" who formed a circle round their prisoner and pricked him with their swords until he sank exhausted to the ground, […]
 
 
 - William Lecky, quoted in 1965, Gilbert Geis, Juvenile Gangs (page 6)
 
Derived terms
    
Descendants
    
Translations
    
knitted jacket worn by athletes before or after exercise
  | 
similar garment worn for warmth
  | 
Verb
    
sweater (third-person singular simple present sweaters, present participle sweatering, simple past and past participle sweatered)
Anagrams
    
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