sometimes, yes, but once you break them in, they're fantastic!
They are to let your feet breathe.
If the converses fit then jog with them.
If you feel your feet hurt
It means, literally, "Your feet hurt you". As a question, this would come out as "do your feet hurt?" As a statement, "your feet hurt."
"Feet" is the plural noun in "The cat hurt its front feet."
1917
no
As a verb, the word 'converses' means 'to engage in conversation'. For example, "Alice converses with Bob." As a noun, 'converse' means 'a situation, object, or statement that is the reverse of another'. However, this noun cannot be pluralised.
No.
Converses are conditionals with the antecedent and consequent swapped. Example: "If it snows tonight, they will close school," and, "If they will close school, it will snow tonight."
MxPx
nowhere.....