Vest (pronounced vest)
(1) A
sleeveless, waist- or hip-length garment made of various materials, with a
front opening usually secured by buttons, a zipper, or the like, worn over a
shirt, blouse, dress, or other article for style or warmth:
(2) A
part or trimming simulating the front of such a garment; vestee.
(3) A
waist-length garment worn for protective purposes, now often in high-visibility
(hi-viz) colors.
(4) As bulletproof
vest, an outer garment worn by soldiers and others in security-related fields.
(5) Historically,
a long garment resembling a cassock, worn by men in the time of Charles II
(archaic except as an ecclesiastical vestment).
(6) To
place or settle (something, especially property, rights, powers etc) in the
possession or control of someone (usually followed by in).
(7) To
invest or endow (a person, group, committee, etc.) with something, as powers,
functions, or rights:
(8) In
the sense of something becoming vested in a person or institution; a right.
(9) In
common law jurisdictions, an absolute right to some present or future interest
in something of value. When a right has
vested, the person is legally entitled to what has been promised and may seek
relief in court if the benefit is not given.
1375–1425: From the late Middle English vest (to put in possession of a person), from the Old French vestir (to clothe; get dressed), from the Medieval Latin vestire (to put into possession, to invest), from vestire (to clothe, dress, to adorn) and related to vestis (garment, clothing (and akin to wear)), from the primitive Indo-European wes-ti-, a suffixed form of wes- (to clothe), an extended form of the root eu- (to dress). Vest & vested are nouns & verbs and vesting is a verb & adjective; the noun plural is vests.
The noun developed from the verb in the sense of a "loose, sleeveless outer garment" (worn by men in Eastern countries or in ancient times) dates from the 1610s, from the French seventeenth century veste (a vest, jacket), from the Italian vesta & veste (robe, gown), from the Latin vestis from vestire. In England, the sleeveless garment worn by men beneath the coat was introduced by Charles II (1630-1685; King of Scotland 1649-1651, King of England, Scotland and Ireland 1660-1685) in a bid to rein in men's attire at court, which had grown extravagant and decadent in the French mode, Samuel Pepys (1633-1703) noting in his diary on 8 October 1666:
The King hath yesterday, in Council, declared his resolution of setting a fashion for clothes (and) it will be a vest, I know not well how; but it is to teach the nobility thrift.
Louis XIV (1638–1715; le Roi Soleil (the Sun King), King of France 1643-1715) is said to have mocked the effort by putting his footmen in such vests and sending Charles a painting of them standing at court. The past-participle adjective from the verb in the sense of "established, secured, settled, not in a state of contingency" dates from 1766. The verb revest (clothe again (with or as with a garment)) developed with the verb and was from revesten, from the Old French revestir, from the Late Latin revestire (to clothe again), the construct being re- (back, again) + vestire (to clothe, dress, adorn). The related forms were revested & revesting.
One movement, many agendas: The Gilets Jaunes, December 2018.
The yellow vests movement (mouvement des gilets jaunes) was a large but loosely structured protest movement with origins in France in mid-2018. It began in May that year as an online petition on social media with mass demonstrations being staged on successive weekends in November and December. The agenda was primarily one of economic justice although factions within the movement have different objectives, ranging from tax reform to a revolutionary overthrow of the state. Yellow vests were chosen as a symbol for the wholly practical reason French law requires motorists to have them in their vehicles so they were cheap, distinctive and widely available. In other countries, protest movements with similar grievances also adopted yellow vests (often called "hi-vis" (high-visibility) but none seem yet to have achieved critical mass.
Lindsay Lohan in white puffer down vest with furry hood , black leggings and Ugg boots leaving XXI Forever, Salt Lake City, Utah, November 2013.
Although the economic pressures had existed for some time, it was the policies of the newly elected President Emmanuel Macron (b 1977; President of France since 2017) which inspired action. Although of bourgeois origin, a few months in the Élysée Palace mixing with the rich convinced Le Président he was one of the aristocracy and accordingly followed the advice of his new friends that France’s problem was the working class spending their disposable income on fast-food, tobacco & drink and it would be for their own good to tax them more so the money could be passed to the rich who would put it to better use. In the Élysée, while there’s now a sense of much noblesse, there’s rather less oblige. The protests forced Macron temporarily to retreat but even at the time this was thought a change in tactics, not strategy and few doubted the hostilities would resume as soon as the country began its peaceful co-existence with COVID-19, the mouvement des gilets jaunes making it clear it would respond to any attempt by the authorities to concoct spurious pandemic-related reasons to restrict protest.
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