You should wear a jockstrap and a cup for football. Unless you want your balls crushed. I've been hit in the balls playing football without a cup and it hurts like hell. You don't want a football crashing into your nuts, or a guy tackling you and having his knee somewhere it shouldn't be.
Police officers typically do not wear jock straps as part of their standard uniform. However, individual officers may choose to wear them for personal comfort or support, especially if they engage in physical activities or training. Uniforms are designed primarily for functionality and professionalism rather than athletic support.
Different men wear it differently. Oftentimes the jock/cup replace the underwear entirely. Otherwise the jock would typically go outside underwear, sliding shorts, etc.
It kind of depends. Different men wear jockstraps differently. Most often, the jockstrap replaces underwear entirely--one option. This is what I'd recommend in general. If you are wearing a hard cup, e.g. in baseball, then usually you wear the jock outside your sliding shorts. But a lot of sliding shorts have a cup pouch built in, making a jock unnecessary. In hockey, if the cup pouch isn't built in, the jock can go outside. I see no reason to wear a swimming jock if you are wearing racing trunks or jammers, so don't bother wearing a jock in this case.
Yes, men can wear perfume, but cologne will probably work better for them.
Jock is the slang term for an athlete. It is a reference to a jock-strap, a men's undergarment used specifically for sports.
Mostly linen clothes but men wear kilts around the waist and women, though there were not many female scribes they wore straight fitting dresses with straps for the shoulders.
Perhaps the biggest sensation to hit the men's underwear scene was the 1934 arrival of jock-type underwear shorts.
You can purchase Cherokee work wear for men online from stores such as JCPenny. Alternatively, you can purchase these items from websites such as AllHeart.
it depends on there job.....
Yeah
Mostly linen clothes but men wear kilts around the waist and women, though there were not many female scribes they wore straight fitting dresses with straps for the shoulders.
A Gallup poll in 2007 found that only 6% of men wore neckties to work.