I've only ever heard the word "perky" used in two contexts....I wonder, though, what women think of the word "perky," you know, like Doris Day used to be...
Considering the various derogatory terms used by some men to describe women these days, I would think "broad" is pretty tame by comparison.Hard as some find it to believe, I don't set out to offend people. And while I am pathologically resistant to self-censorship, I find it just plain ill-mannered to address people in terms they would rather I didn't. (If that makes me PC, oh well, I'm PC.)
So, if broads would rather I not call 'em broads, I won't call 'em broads. But the broads you keep company with sound like kind of broads who don't object to being called broads. Speaking broadly, of course.
Those sorts of terms have all been replaced in the vocabularies of modern young women by the catchall term "D-Bag."
And speaking of terms which have disappeared, do kids in the back seat on long trips play "Punch Buggy" anymore?
...
In these latter days of parkways, motorways, Interstate highways and "express lanes" (toll roads), are there still speed traps? And do the less well-off drive rattletraps?
Second verses are important! As are third, if third there be. "Oh thus be it ever when free men shall stand.."Across the alley from the Alamo stood a pinto pony and a Navaho...
I never realized that line was in the lyrics but it seems to be. But who ever learns the second verse of anything? (I am Henry the 8th notwithstanding).
Second verses are important! As are third, if third there be. "Oh thus be it ever when free men shall stand.."