A tuxedo IS the jacket. If you wear tails, wear a vest underneath, a real tie or cravat ,and cufflinks with French-cuffed shirts.
There is none. Dinner jacket is English English for tuxedo! It does imply a black tie and vice versa.
There is a six (6) letter word for it. It is called a tuxedo.
'Black tie' almost always means a tuxedo (what the UK calls a dinner jacket). It is nearly synonymous with the term 'formal wear.'
Black tie (Tuxedo) dates from 1860, when Henry Poole & Co., created a short smoking jacket for the then Prince of Wales to wear to informal dinner parties as an alternative to white tie, the standard formal dress.
Hell Naw
You do not go to a college for a DJ (dinner Jacket or tuxedo), you go to a gent's outfitters.
A cummerbund is a broad waist sash, often worn as an article of formal dress, such as a tuxedo or dinner jacket.
no because its untraditional
Although a tuxedo shirt is technically a dress shirt, it received its moniker after the advent of the tuxedo. The tuxedo was invented by Pierre Lorillard, who commissioned a tailless jacket for a ball. Although he did not wear it to the ball, several others wore the style, which was christened the "Tuxedo Jacket" after the name of the park in which the ball was held.
Military medals and insignia that you have earned are entirely appropriate for a black or white tie event when wearing a tuxedo or a dinner jacket. Wear them the same way you would for the corresponding military uniform - that is "mess dress" or "dinner dress." This generally means miniature medals and devices over the lapel of the jacket. Ribbons for which there is no medal, and and large medals should only be worn with the military uniforms.
Yes.!
Tuxedo