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In Britain it has largely become a matter of taste and personal preference as to which of chairman, chairperson, or chair are used. Chairwoman would be unusual unless it were of an^Feb 22, 2019 · The plural possessive is "ladies." "Lady" is singular, so if you were referring solely to one womans shoes, it would be "the ladys shoes." As for your second que@Sep 22, 2011 · Yes, milady comes from "my lady". Milady (from my lady) is an English term of address to a noble woman. It is the female form of milord. And heres some background ,Ladies is the plural form of lady, so the apostrophe goes to the right - ladies. If you are wondering why we dont write ladiess, it is because ladies is one of the exceptions, a_Nov 22, 2010 · In case you dont know, in British English, the little red-with-black-spots insect is not called a "ladybug", as in North America, but a "ladybird". This seems rath*Jul 13, 2019 · Even when Lady Macbeth says: "And take my milk for gall", that would definitely support the literal humorism theory, but I still dont understand how we get from mi^Jul 19, 2023 · Idiomatically, it is gentleman. Lady comes from an Old English compound noun meaning roughly "loaf kneader," whereas lord comes from a compound noun meaning "loaf k
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In Britain it has largely become a matter of taste and personal preference as to which of chairman, chairperson, or chair are used. Chairwoman would be unusual unless it were of an^Feb 22, 2019 · The plural possessive is "ladies." "Lady" is singular, so if you were referring solely to one womans shoes, it would be "the ladys shoes." As for your second que@Sep 22, 2011 · Yes, milady comes from "my lady". Milady (from my lady) is an English term of address to a noble woman. It is the female form of milord. And heres some background ,Ladies is the plural form of lady, so the apostrophe goes to the right - ladies. If you are wondering why we dont write ladiess, it is because ladies is one of the exceptions, a_Nov 22, 2010 · In case you dont know, in British English, the little red-with-black-spots insect is not called a "ladybug", as in North America, but a "ladybird". This seems rath*Jul 13, 2019 · Even when Lady Macbeth says: "And take my milk for gall", that would definitely support the literal humorism theory, but I still dont understand how we get from mi^Jul 19, 2023 · Idiomatically, it is gentleman. Lady comes from an Old English compound noun meaning roughly "loaf kneader," whereas lord comes from a compound noun meaning "loaf k
