In american english, a single woman may be considered 'wifey' if she is stereotypically suitable marriage material for a sexist type of man, and in the uk, it. If the gender was unimportant, it would not be a problem The men might have different opinions, and circumstances alter cases, but i expect wifey would take a dim view of the diminutive
Wifey (Sandra Otterson) | Wifey Picture #27407676 - 454 x 681 - FanPix.Net
By the same token, girlie / sonny today are likely to be seen as insulting / disrespectful in many contexts (but lassie / laddie are more generally acceptable in scotland)
I've used to say except of for a lot of sentences but recently someone noted (or corrected) me apart from
I don't really remember the context that this correction was in Anyway, after sometime i saw this article in cambridge which is talking about the difference between except for to apart from That says that my habbit to say except of is a mistake? The noun customer is clear to all of us
In this site both prefer & would prefer express the preference However, this site said we can use would prefer and prefer with the same meaning However, the only difference is that we. When i'm talking about my friend, who is a girl, but not a girlfriend, what word or phrase should i use