Historical Dictionary of the fashion industry

REEBOK

Reebok: translation

Joseph William Foster of Great Britain made a business of creating handmade running shoes in 1895 that were later worn in the Olympics of 1924. In 1939, he founded the company known as J.W. Foster & Sons. In 1958, two of the owner's grandsons started a companion company they called Reebok, named after an African gazelle. In 1979, Paul Fireman negotiated thelicensefor North American distribution; three years later Reebok came out with the Freestyle, a women's athletic shoe, to satisfy the fitness craze. In the late 1980s, the Reebok Pump line was introduced and the company expanded to include the rights to manufacture sideline apparel for the National Football League, National Basketball Association, National Hockey League, Canadian Football League, and Major League Baseball. Reebok's successful marketing and innovation ranked it as the number threebrandin the athleticfootwearindustry—that is, until Paul Fireman sold Reebok toAdidasin 2005, making it the number two brand, withNikeas number one.
See alsoPuma; Sneakers.

  1. reebokсущ. тж.emrhebok a small brownish gray South African antelope Pelea capreolus with sharp horns.Synstrong peele reeboc roebuck]...Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический словарь И. Мостицкого
  2. reebokсамец косули...Голландско-русский словарь