Both ladies' beer and ladies beer are acceptable, but there is a slightly different implication depending on which you use Ladies' beer is written in the possessive form, and thus implies ownership. In the middle ages sleeves were also separate items, held on with ties Ladies would give men a sleeve as a token of regard Are there examples of a pair of sleeves? 10 apart from guys, which is fine and the most obvious choice, as others have mentioned, you could use ladies, which has a tinge of both irony and flattery
Ladies is best accompanied by slightly exaggerated punctilio if the speaker is a man. A woman of a certain age is a common saying It means more than a woman of a given age, a woman who could be any age or female, without respect to age It's usage instead seems to suggest. I've always been confused by the terms washroom, restroom, bathroom, lavatory, toilet and toilet room My impression is that canadians would rather say washroom while americans would probably say
Traditional writing often used dear sir or madam so dear madams is correct although i think people avoid it today after that famous speech from the play i am not a madam Which played on the occasional usage of this word for a woman who runs a house of prostitution You can address one specifically the rest as a group like dear. I normally just use the term guys as in hey guys or good mornin. Ladies captain means the captain responsible for ladies golf elected to represent the lady members at club and county level and to fulfil [sic] any requirements of the relevant golf association. @janusbahsjacquet 'ladies and gentelmen' is a specific case where very few people will take offence, but if you refer to an individual woman as a 'lady' (or a group of women as 'ladies'), there's a reasonably good chance that you will annoy her (depending on the prevalence of feminist thought where you live).
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