BroadwayWorld: Who Played Lady Capulet in Romeo and Juliet - Shakespeare's Globe
Gregory/Paris's Page Off-Broadway Romeo and Juliet 1988 Juliet Off-Broadway Romeo and Juliet 1988 Lady Capulet Off-Broadway Romeo and Juliet 1988 Lady Capulet/Lady Montague Off-Broadway Romeo and ...
The Hollywood Reporter: Natasha Parry, Lady Capulet in Franco Zeffirelli’s ‘Romeo and Juliet,’ Dies at 84
Natasha Parry, Lady Capulet in Franco Zeffirelli’s ‘Romeo and Juliet,’ Dies at 84
Friar Laurence/Montague/Capulet/Prince/Paris Off-Broadway Romeo and Juliet 2001 Juliet Off-Broadway Romeo and Juliet 2001 Juliet/Tybalt Off-Broadway Romeo and Juliet ...
MSN: “You wouldn’t expect me to do a turn as Lady Capulet” — Rebel Wilson speaks about playing a mother on screen for the first time
“You wouldn’t expect me to do a turn as Lady Capulet” — Rebel Wilson speaks about playing a mother on screen for the first time
In Baz Luhrmann’s “Romeo + Juliet,” Romeo is in Verona Beach — perhaps ensnared in a fiery gas station gunfight, playing billiards in a deteriorating warehouse, or speeding with the Capulet cousins in ...
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.
single word requests - Is there an opposite gender for "lady ...
I tried searching Google Ngram Viewer for "Look lady" and "Listen lady", both capitalized so as to occur at the start of a sentence, with the hope that these ngrams would reflect the usage of "lady" in a derogatory/dismissive sense. It seems to have come into usage around 1950, and really took off in the late 1990s.