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The chemise, also called a smock or shift, is a simple, but very erotic and sexy female undergarment worn next to the skin, originally intended to protect clothing from sweat and body oils. Chemise is the French term. Italians called it a "camicia". The English called the same shirt a "smock" and the Irish called it a "léine." Whatever you choose to call it, a chemise is still potentially very sexy and sexually arousing item of lingerie, and our beautifully erotic chemises are sure to turn you and your partner on. If you wear one of our sexy chemises be prepared to take it off very quickly!
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Lingerie is a term for women's erotically stimulating fashion undergarments. It derives from the French word 'lin' for linen. While the term in French applies to all undergarments for either sex, in English ‘lingerie’ is applied only to those women's undergarments designed to be visually appealing or erotic, typically incorporating materials such as lace and silk.
The chemise seems to have been developed from the Roman tunica and first became popular in the European Middle Ages. Women wore shifts or chemises underneath their gowns or robes; men wore chemises with their trousers or braies, and covered the chemises with garments such as doublets, robes, etc. In those times, it was usually the only piece of clothing that was washed regularly. In Western countries, women's shifts did not fall out of fashion until the early 20th century, when they were generally replaced by brassieres, panties, girdles, and full slips.
Men's chemises may be said to still survive, as the common shirt. However, the shirt is now an outer garment, and is often protected from skin oil and perspiration by an undershirt or T-shirt worn next to the skin. The chemise also morphed into the smock-frock, a garment worn by English laborers until the early 20th century. Its loose cut and wide sleeves were well adapted to heavy labor. The name smock is nowadays still used for military combat jackets in the UK, whereas in the Belgian army the term has been corrupted to smoke-vest.