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What is the name of the kind of Japanese kimono socks?

Split-toe shoes and socks are shoes and socks in which the thumbs are separated from the other four toes, and are made of fabric, silk, or leather. They were first worn in China, and are one of Japan's most iconic traditional dresses because the feet in split-toe shoes and socks look like pig's feet.

Split-toe shoes and socks, or two-toe shoes and socks, are shoes and socks in which the bunion is separated from the other four toes, or tabi in Japanese. In ancient China, split-toe socks or two-toe socks were called yatou socks (also known as crow's head socks, crow's head socks) or manifold socks,, and, in addition to being made of fabric and silk, some were made of leather, and were therefore sometimes written yatou socks, crow's head socks, crow's head socks, yatou socks, crow's head socks, crow's head socks, manifold socks, manifold socks, and manifold socks.

Split-toe socks are "yah"-shaped, allowing the toes to catch on the top cord when wearing clogs.

The term "footbag" was originally an old Chinese term for socks, but Japan absorbed the name and recorded the term "footbag" in the 11th century. Later, in Japanese, it came to mean socks and shoes with split toes.