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The plural possessive is ladies'. lady is singular, so if you were referring solely to one woman's shoes, it would be the lady's shoes. as for your second question, i'm assuming you're referring to a group of women in your salutation of them, so it would be good morning, ladies. and as you're addressing them directly, the comma preceding ladies is necessary. So after you get out you can just omit the apostrophe like we do in speaking and write mens room the way it's pronounced. In addressing three people in an email isn't it more polite to use their names rather than hi ladies
Also when you walk into a quad cubicle isn't it more polite to address people by their names You can't tell the singular from the plural possessive in speech, so there's no reason to do it in writing, either Grouping people together when there are only three is treating them as interchangeable, and is disrespectful isn't it?
Dear ladies or my dear ladies if you prefer
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 Hence, there is no ambiguity with the men, and for the same reason no ambiguity with the ladies If you are wondering why we don't write ladies's, it is because ladies is one of the exceptions, along with girls', parents', players', weeks' and even klingons'
The tradition of ladies first was originally a case of men being nice to women by voluntarily giving up their right to precedence As oerkelens has stated, this would only be the case in safe situations, as it wouldn't be nice to send a woman ahead into danger. 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.
The metrical pattern of ladies and gentlemen consists of (arguably) two dactyls
A dactyl is a group of three syllables where the first is stressed and the second two are unstressed. @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). 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.
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