LADY BLOG

Thursday 09th of September 2010 02:08:32 AM

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1996 Lady Kier in ve
leather lady   Asia
Lady Bunny
dirty martini by lad
Lady GaGa Added  Mar 7  2009 Views  1 974
leather lady posing
know that she is an ARTIST  She does this  mainly  by saying shockingly dirty things  and wearing weird stuff  Up until now  her costume choices  though odd  have stayed on the sexy side       but now she is starting to veer into crazy bag lady territory  First she did an interview wearing a jacket made entirely of Kermit the Frog puppets
Lady Godiva
Lady GaGa Added  Mar 19  2009 Views  1 726
 
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Washington Post (blog)

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MTV UK

Lady Gaga Wears Her Food For Vogue Hommes Japan
Backseat Cuddler
It's a picture of Lady Gaga wearing meat on the cover of Vogue Hommes Japan (Autumn/Winter 2010-2011). I don't know. This shot was styled by Nicola ...
Lady Gaga Draws Fire From PETA Over Meat BikiniAccess Hollywood
Pass notes, No 2843: Lady GagaThe Guardian
Lady Gaga butchers role as car mechanicMontreal Gazette
The Week Magazine -Artistdirect.com -Autostraddle (blog)
all 232 news articles »
3

Telegraph.co.uk

First Lady Michelle Obama shows off her moves on the sports field
Daily Mail
And First Lady Michelle Obama led from the front as she showed off her sporting prowess at an event in New Orleans today. Mrs Obama, 46, is well known for ...
First lady Obama works with NFL to get kids movingThe Associated Press
First lady, Commissioner Goodell team upNFL News (blog)
First Lady Brings Child Obesity Fight To La.WDSU New Orleans
WWL First News -The Tanooki (blog) -FOX 8 News WVUE-TV
all 133 news articles »
4

Washington Post

Lady Gaga Vs. Eminem At VMAs: Ke$ha Weighs In
MTV.com
Regarding her take on the evening's biggest prize, Video of the Year, the "Tik Tok" singer was torn between VMA-nomination dominators Lady Gaga and Eminem. ...
Is Lady Gaga's 'Bad Romance' Video Of The Year?MTV.com
It's Lady Gaga's 'Moment' At The VMAs, Celebs SayMTV.com
Lady Gaga To Attend This Year's MTV VMAsIdolator: All About The Music (blog)
MTV.com -Examiner.com -One News Page
all 117 news articles »
5

New York Times

First Lady Asks Congress to Join Childhood Obesity Fight
New York Times
Declaring the beginning of the next phase of a program to combat childhood obesity, the first lady, Michelle Obama, called on Congress on Wednesday to ...

and more »
6

Sydney Morning Herald

Lady Gaga Tell-All Says She is a Binge Eater
Artistdirect.com
When it comes to Lady Gaga, there is money to be made. Especially when you are her former tour manager or a tabloid book author. In Poker Face: The Rise and ...
Lady Gaga and Dangerous Dieting: Is She Hiding an Eating Disorder?CBS News
Lady Gaga hospitalized six times in 2009 over dangerous dieting, new ...New York Daily News
Lady Gaga Hospitalized for Dangerous Dieting?Twirlit
BlackBook Magazine -iVillage Entertainment -Examiner.com
all 245 news articles »
7

USA Today

'Glee': full track list for premiere includes Lady Gaga, Poison, and Jay-Z ...
Examiner.com
Lady Gaga, "Telephone" - We already know that this number will be a duet for Lea Michele and Charice. In other words, this is going to be epic. ...
GLEE Premiere to Feat. Lady Gaga, Jay-Z and PoisonBroadway World
Lady Gaga, Jay-Z and Poison on Tap for Glee's Season PremiereBroadway.com
Jay-Z, Lady Gaga For Glee Season PremierePopDash

all 14 news articles »
8

Washington Post (blog)

Hey, isn't that...?: Lady Gaga doing yoga on Capitol Hill
Washington Post (blog)
Hey, isn't that Lady Gaga dropping in for the Wednesday noon class at Bikram Yoga Capitol Hill, after her previous night's show at Verizon Center? ...
Wonkette's Liz Glover & Lady Gaga Had a Yoga ThingWonkette (satire) (blog)

all 2 news articles »
9

Celebuzz (blog)

Joseph Gordon-Levitt sings Lady Gaga's 'Bad Romance': Watch here
Entertainment Weekly
Last Monday at downtown Manhattan's Pianos, Gordon-Levitt performed a tongue-in-cheek rock version of Lady Gaga's 2009 smash, Bad Romance. ...
Watch Joseph Gordon-Levitt Perform Lady Gaga's 'Bad Romance'Cinematical (blog)
Joseph Gordon-Levitt covered Lady GagaThe Blemish

all 6 news articles »
10

Monsters and Critics.com

Gaga buys Beyonce diamond-encrusted whip
Monsters and Critics.com
Lady Gaga splashed out and bought pal Beyonce a diamond-encrusted whip for her birthday, according to reports. ...
Lady Gaga gives Beyonce diamond-encrusted whipExaminer.com
Lady Gaga Buys Sex Toy For BeyoncePeace FM Online
Lady Gaga presented a Whip to BeyonceNew Movies List (blog)
Hollywoodnews.com -Digital Spy -American Superstar Magazine
all 130 news articles »
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Looking does not always equals seeing... isnt it? Apart from the central lady and the rest there is a waving man on the right. I have not noticed him at all until home...

Thank you everyone for your attention and to people who added me yesterday. I will try to go through my mailbox this week. Wish you all great day!

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:For other uses, see Lady (disambiguation).

A lady is a woman who is the counterpart of a lord; or, the counterpart of a gentleman. "Lady" can be used as a title, or as a (formal) form of address for any woman.

from a U.S. stamp embodies ladylike-ness.]]

Etymology and usage

The word comes from Old English hlaifdige; the first part of the word is laif, loaf, bread, as in the corresponding hlaford, lord; the second part is usually taken to be from the root dig-, to knead, seen also in dough; the sense development from bread-kneader, bread-maker, to the ordinary meaning, though not clearly to be traced historically, may be illustrated by that of lord.

The primary meaning of "mistress of a household" is now mostly obsolete, save for the occasional use of old-fashioned phrases such as "lady of the house." This meaning is retained, however, in the title First Lady, used for the wife of an elected president or prime minister. In many cultures in Europe the equivalent term serves as a general title of address equivalent to the English "Mrs" (Gaelic Bean-uasal, French Madame, Spanish Se?, Italian Signora, German Frau)

The special use of the word as a title of the Virgin Mary, usually Our Lady, represents the Latin Domina Nostra. In Lady Day and Lady Chapel the word is properly a genitive, representing the hlaefdigan.

's The Lady of Shalott, 1888 (Tate Gallery, London)]]

In the British peerage

As a title of nobility the uses of "Lady" are mainly paralleled by those of "Lord". It is thus a less formal alternative to the full title giving the specific rank, of marchioness, countess, viscountess or baroness, whether as the title of the husbands rank by right or courtesy, or as the lady's title in her own right. A widow becomes the dowager, e.g. The Dowager Lady Smith.

In the case of a duke or marquess, who by courtesy have "Lord" prefixed to their given and family name, the wife is known by the husband's given and family name with "Lady" prefixed, e.g. Lady John Smith; the daughters of dukes, marquesses and earls are by courtesy Ladies; here that title is prefixed to the given and family name of the lady, e.g. Lady Jane Smith, and this is preserved if the lady marries a commoner, e.g. Mr John and Lady Jane Smith.

"Lady" is also the customary title of the wife of a baronet or knight; the proper title, now only used in legal documents or on sepulchral monuments, is "Dame"; in the latter case the usage is to prefix "Dame" to the given name of the wife followed by the surname of the husband, thus Dame Jane Smith, but in the former, "Lady" with the surname of the husband only, Sir John and Lady Smith. When a wife divorces a knight and he marries again, the new wife will be Lady Smith while the previous wife becomes Jane, Lady Smith. If he then dies his widow becomes Dowager Lady Smith (no the). During the 15th and 16th centuries princesses or daughters of the blood royal were usually known by their Christian names with "The Lady" prefixed, e.g. The Lady Elizabeth.

More recent usage: social class

In more recent years, usage of the word lady is even more complicated. Remarks made by the journalist William Allen White in his 1946 autobiography indicate part of the difficulties. White relates that a woman who had paid a fine for prostitution came to his newspaper to protest, not that the fact of her conviction was reported, but that the newspaper referred to her as a "woman" rather than a "lady." Since that incident, White assured his readers that his papers referred to human females as "women," with the exception of police court characters, who are all "ladies."

White's anecdote touches on a phenomenon that others have remarked on as well. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, in a difference reminiscent of Nancy Mitford's U vs. non-U distinction, lower class women strongly preferred to be called "ladies" while women from higher backgrounds were content to be identified as "women." Alfred Ayers remarked in 1881 that upper middle class female store clerks in his day were content to be "saleswomen," while lower class female store clerks, for whom their job represented a social advancement, indignantly insisted on being called "salesladies." Something of this sense may also be underneath Kipling's lines:

:The Colonel's lady and Rosie O'Grady —

:Sisters under the skin

These social class issues, while no longer on the front burner in the twenty-first century, have imbued the formal use of "lady" with something of an odour of irony.

It remains in use colloquially; for example, as a counterpart to "gentleman," in the phrase "ladies and gentlemen," and is generally interchangeable (in a strictly informal sense) with "woman." (e.g., "The lady at the store said I could return this item in thirty days.")

More recent usage: sexism (US)

Non-sexist language guidelines forbid its use to refer attributively to the sex of a working person, as in lady lawyer and lady doctor. Many find these to have a condescending nuance not shared by female lawyer or woman doctor ; compare poetess for a similar problem.

Some advocates of non-sexist language recommend not using the word at all, whereas others permit its parallel use in the same circumstances in which a man would be called a gentleman or lord (for example, titling washrooms Men and Ladies would be considered sexist, but using either Men and Women or Ladies and Gentlemen would be acceptable; as is landlady as the parallel of landlord.)

In the United States, notably among younger feminists of the 1990s and 00s influenced by riot grrl, "lady" has occasionally been reclaimed in a more ironic fashion. For example, Miranda July's Joanie 4 Jackie chain letter videotape project is said to consist of "lady-made movies," a feminist music and video distributor in North Carolina called itself Mr. Lady Records, and chorus of Le Tigre's song "LT Tour Theme" from the album Feminist Sweepstakes (2000) declares itself to be written "for the ladies and the fags."

Lady as a title

The term, "Lady", may also be used as a proper title, opposite a "Lord". The use of the word is somewhat exinct, nowadays.

Famous Ladies...

* Lady Diana Spencer

Fictional Ladies...

* Lady Bracknell - Gwendolen Fairfax's mother from The Importance of Being Earnest.

* Lady Cassandra - villain of the 9th and 10th Doctor Who, who appeared in The End of The World and New Earth.

* Lady Chatterley

* Lady Everglot - The lady of the family Everglots, from Corpse Bride.

* Lady Jessica - noble lady of the fictional House Atreides from Dune.

* Lady Westholme - A running candidate of Parliament from Agatha Christie's Appointment With Death.

* Lady Macbeth - The clever and conniving wife of Macbeth in Shakespeare's Macbeth.

Kenny Rogers sings "Lady"

Love song

"Lady" is also the title of a 1980 chart topper by Kenny Rogers. It reached #1 in the US pop charts for 6 weeks and #12 in the UK. It was written by Rogers friend, Lionel Richie (who also did the song himself). The song appeared on Rogers' 1980 "Greatest Hits" album, which also reached Number 1 in the United States and sold over 30 million copies world-wide.

References

* Merriam Webster's Dictionary of English Usage (Merriam-Webster, 1989), ISBN 0-87779-132-5.

Category:Titles

Category:Women's social titles

Category:Women

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The Wikipedia article is licensed under http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html and uses material from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/lady.