Loss of femininity

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Belly

Well-Known Member
Slightly off topic, but...when I worked in an office it used to mildly annoy me that the blokes had to wear a shirt and tie (and trousers of course) while the women could wear whatever they liked. Jeans and casual tops were the norm.
It's the same when you watch TV news and current affairs programmes. Kirsty Wark wears some outfits that wouldn't look out of place in a circus, while her male colleagues on Newsnight wear suits and ties.
There. I feel better now...
 

srw

It's a bit more complicated than that...
Remind me. Is it 2011 or 1970?

I know I shouldn't get dragged into this sort of blokey anecdote-fest...
 

GrumpyGregry

Here for rides.
The collective noun I use at work for teams, mixed or single gender, is "Guys", as in "Guys, what do you think?" but I've been hauled up before the PC police so many times for so many things that this doesn't even get on the radar any more.

As a sometime rugby ref it was easy to ask both the skippers of women's rugby teams how they would like to be addressed ("Lads" being pretty much the standard mode of address for male teams or perhaps "Now then gentlemen" if you are telling them off). The responses were often surprising "Ladies" was very popular, "Girls" more common, with "whatever ever you like so long as it isn't dear or darling, the ref we had last week was a right patronising tw*t, and he couldn't keep up either!" being a commonly expressed wish. The only problem I recall arose when one side "Girls" and the other said "we are a ladies rugby team". Oh how I wound them up over that. "Blue seven, that wasn't very ladylike, do it again and you'll have a 10 minute rest"
 

mcshroom

Bionic Subsonic
I know I shouldn't get dragged into this sort of blokey anecdote-fest...

Forums are about talking to people who have experiences or opinions that differ with your own are they not?

I'm not sure how a majority of these posts could be described as 'blokey' (which btw is a deliberately derrogative term - I thought that was the original objection).
 

Noodley

Guest
Is "guys" not a non-gender term nowadays?

anyways around here it is "loons" for males and "lasses" or "lassies" for females.

And we wear kilts.
 

srw

It's a bit more complicated than that...
Remind me. Is it 2011 or 1970?

Ladies, gentlemen, boys, girls, guys, gals, apologies.

I had a bad day yesterday and let it spill over into the cafe. Sorry.
 
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