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== Etymology ==
The term ''G-string'' is first attested in 1878.<ref>{{Citation | quote = Around each [Navajo] boy's waist is the tight "geestring", from which a single strip of cloth runs between the limbs from front to back - these two articles never being removed from the person in the presence of another.|author= J. H. Beadle |title=Western Wilds and the Men who redeem them |date= 1878
|page= 249 |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=njp.32101078191184&seq=11}}</ref> In the same book [[William Henry Harrison Beadle | Beadle]] uses ''girdle and breech-clout'' for he same garment<ref>{{Citation | quote = [the Moqui] often appear entirely naked, except the girdle and breech-clout.|author= J. H. Beadle |title=Western Wilds and the Men who redeem them |date= 1878
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There are numerous examples in 19th century newspapers of a ''girdle'' (as the belt of a [[breech clout]]) being the repository for scalps, tomahawks and knives of native americans<ref>{{cite web | url=https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/search/pages/results/?state=&date1=1800&date2=1900&proxtext=girdle+scalp&x=16&y=3&dateFilterType=yearRange&rows=20&searchType=basic | title=Chronicling America | Library of Congress }}</ref> and with the same meaning ''girdle string'' was still in use in 1899<ref>{{Citation | quote = he stripped the scalp from his fallen enemy and tied the hair to his girdle string
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