It is; it's the British term for a windbreaker, especially the old
fashioned type with only a half-zipper. The name is borrowed from that of
an Inuit garment of similar design, I believe.

I think the extension of the meaning came about because fanatical steam
train or steam waggon viewers (steam trucks were used in Britain until the
1960s or even 1970s and there are entertaining Youtube videos of steam
waggon fairs and steam traction engines and lorries holding up traffic on
narrow English roads) often wore these anoraks in England's wet, cold
climate.

On Sat, Feb 12, 2022 at 9:26 AM RichS <rshannon6...@gmail.com> wrote:

> And I always thought an "anorak" was a piece of clothing. The things one
> can learn here:-)))
>
> Best,
> Rich in ATL
>

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