By Victor Martins , FootballPredictions. Premier League champions Liverpool took their tally of league titles to 19 in the season, ending a run of 30 years without winning the league. After being founded in , the first strip worn by Liverpool was very different to the colours they wear nowadays.
For the first four years of their existence, The Reds wore a kit consisting of a light blue and white quartered shirt - similar to that of Blackburn Rovers - with dark blue shorts and socks. Red was first worn by the club in , as they ran out in red shirts, white shorts and red socks. Across the next 69 years, the kit maintained its red shirt and white socks, but the design of the socks rotated considerably across this period. Black, white and red and white hooped socks all featured in Liverpool strips up until the first permanent all-red strip was worn in Legendary Liverpool manager Bill Shankly then initiated the switch to an all-red strip during his sixth year at Anfield.
Urban Thesaurus finds slang words that are related to your search query. Click words for definitions. As you've probably noticed, the slang synonyms for " term " are listed above. Note that due to the nature of the algorithm, some results returned by your query may only be concepts, ideas or words that are related to " term " perhaps tenuously. This is simply due to the way the search algorithm works. Urban Thesaurus crawls the web and collects millions of different slang terms, many of which come from UD and turn out to be really terrible and insensitive this is the nature of urban slang, I suppose.
Hopefully the related words and synonyms for " term " are a little tamer than average. It was only natural that that use of nicknames would progress to sporting events and, more specifically, teams. Whether it be opposition fans giving a team a derogatory name in order to annoy their rival fans or a name from the supporters themselves, keen to make the club their own, virtually all football teams have a nickname. Yet where did they come from?
Was there a reason they started getting used in the first place? And what are some of the better origin stories? Plenty of the most obvious nicknames are based around little more than the colour of shirt that the team plays in. Take the city of Liverpool, for example. There you have two teams that have competed in the top-flight of English football for most, though not all, of their history.
Everton play in blue and Liverpool play in red. Unsurprisingly, therefore, they are often referred to as the Blues and the Reds. Some supporters choose to go down slightly more obtuse roads in order to arrive at a decent nickname. Animals are regularly used by some teams, with Hull City being an excellent example.
The biggest difference being that actual magpies like nice shiny things but Newcastle seem incapable of getting their hands on any…. The two most prominent are, coincidentally, named after birds. Nor have, at least as far as evidence shows, any of their fans, players or managers been able to spin their head around degrees on their shoulders. Interestingly, though, the kit came after the nickname.
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