Crossword clues for lacoste
lacoste
- Wimbledon champ, 1925, '28
- Tennis star of the 1920's
- Tennis player called "the Crocodile"
- René who won two Wimbledon singles titles
- Pricey-sounding apparel brand?
- Polo shirt purveyor
- Its logo is a croc
- Crocodile-logo shirt brand
- Clothing company with a crocodile logo
- Clothing brand named for a tennis legend
- Brand with a crocodile logo
- Big name in casualwear
- 1920s tennis great René
- High-end French retailer
- Winner of seven tennis majors in the 1920s
- Sports star who lent his name to a clothing line
- Tennis star nicknamed Le Crocodile
- Netman René
- Tennis great René
- Winner at Wimbledon: 1925
- Tennis star in the 20's
- Company's acquired by recently successful tennis player
- Polo shirt brand
- Company with a crocodile logo
- Big name in polo shirts
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Paris-based high-end apparel company, founded 1933, named for René Lacoste (1904-1996), company co-founder.
Gazetteer
Housing Units (2000): 466
Land area (2000): 0.642266 sq. miles (1.663462 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.642266 sq. miles (1.663462 sq. km)
FIPS code: 40108
Located within: Texas (TX), FIPS 48
Location: 29.311516 N, 98.812882 W
ZIP Codes (1990):
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
LaCoste
Wikipedia
Lacoste is a French clothing company founded in 1933 that sells high-end clothing, footwear, perfume, leather goods, watches, eyewear, and most famously polo shirts. In recent years, Lacoste has introduced a home line of sheeting and towels. The company can be recognized by its green crocodile logo. René Lacoste, the company's founder, was nicknamed "the Crocodile" by fans because of his tenacity on the tennis court. In November 2012 Lacoste was bought by Swiss family-held group Maus Frères.
Lacoste is a French apparel company. Lacoste (or LaCoste) may also refer to:
People- Alexandre Lacoste (1842–1923), Canadian politician
- Amélie Lacoste (born 1988), Canadian figure skater
- André-Claude Lacoste (born 1941), the President of Autorité de sûreté nucléaire (French Nuclear Safety Authority)
- Carlos Lacoste (1929–2004), Argentine president
- Catherine Lacoste (born 1945), French golfer
- Jean-Pascal Lacoste, French singer, actor and TV host
- Jean de Lacoste (1730–1820), lawyer in the parliament of Bordeaux
- Jean-Baptiste Lacoste (died 1821), lawyer
- Jean Lacoste, French-German philosopher
- Jean-Yves Lacoste, French postmodern theologian
- Louis Lacoste (1798–1878), Canadian politician
- Louis Lacoste (composer) (c. 1675 – c. 1750), French composer
- Lucien LaCoste (1908–1995), American physicist
- Paul Lacoste (academic) (born 1923), Canadian lawyer and academic administrator
- Paul V. Lacoste (born 1974), linebacker in the Canadian Football League
- René Lacoste (1904–1996), French tennis player and founder of the apparel company Lacoste
- Robert Lacoste (1898–1989), French politician
- Yves Lacoste (born 1929), French geographer and geopolitician
- Lacoste, Hérault, a commune of the Hérault département, in France
- Lacoste, Vaucluse, a commune and medieval village of the Vaucluse département, in France
- Château Grand-Puy-Lacoste, a winery in the Bordeaux region of France
- Château de Lacoste, in Lacoste, Vaucluse, France
- Château de Lacoste (Lot), in Salviac, Lot, France
- Château de La Coste (Lot), in Grézels, Lot, France
Usage examples of "lacoste".
Inside the traditional Dracula waistcoat, he wore a pink Lacoste shirt.
Saturnin, Gouls and Lacoste, with a thousand women and children armed with clubs and scythes, arrive one morning before the town.
As Lysander could only pull up Franco's jeans mid-thigh, Sherry drove him to Worth Avenue and, despite his protests, kitted him out in boxer shorts, Lacoste polo shirts, chinos, several pairs of loafers and a dark blue baseball cap with saints on the front.
Among the Westernized shopping malls that sold Gucci glasses, Lacoste shirts, soft-suede cowboy boots, Nikon telescopes, computers, fax machines, compact disks, cordless miniphones, condoms, contact lenses, and every manner of leather and gold designer “.
The body of Lacoste was exhumed, the internal organs were extracted, and these, with portions of the muscular tissue, were submitted to analysis by a doctor of Auch, M.
Pymble was where the professional classes, so-called, lived: if any blue-collar workers lived here, the blue collars were by Lacoste or Ralph Lauren.