IanM said:I tend to find that the phrase "cut-throat" is used by people that know very little, or are not involved with wet shaving.
Ian
I heard a "policewoman" referred to as a "woman police officer" on the radio recently. Now if you're going to de-sexualise it and say "police officer" instead of policeman or policewoman, what's the damn point of putting "woman" in front of it?Neil Miller said:none of that pc rubbish like 'spokesperson' 'chairperson' or 'refuse agent'
cheese_dave said:I heard a "policewoman" referred to as a "woman police officer" on the radio recently. Now if you're going to de-sexualise it and say "police officer" instead of policeman or policewoman, what's the damn point of putting "woman" in front of it?Neil Miller said:none of that pc rubbish like 'spokesperson' 'chairperson' or 'refuse agent'
Anyway, I like "open razor", so I'm going to start using that from now on.