What's the difference between saleswoman and saleswomen?
Saleswoman
Definition:
(n.) A woman whose occupation is to sell goods or merchandise.
Example Sentences:
(1) Kathryn Steinle, who was known as Kate, was a medical device saleswoman who reportedly loved travel and dance.
(2) And thus Wilson's unexpected artistic Indian summer began, largely guided by his second wife, Melinda Ledbetter, a former car saleswoman he married in 1995 and with whom he's subsequently adopted five children.
(3) Mary Day Vintage clothes saleswoman (hey, it is east London) who becomes Luther's new love interest.
(4) As a saleswoman explains the products and prices on offer, the complexity of the system becomes apparent.
(5) There is a different lens for male CEOs and female CEOs,” said Annis, who was the first saleswoman at Sony in the 1980s and now provides training to employees at Fortune 500 companies including Microsoft, IBM and Deloitte.
(6) A 59-year-old saleswoman of black hats presented with a severe purpuric eruption of the exposed areas of the face, neck and arms.
(7) That L'Oréal is being sued for attempting to fire a saleswoman in California for not being 'hot' enough only confirms it yet again."
(8) "Bring your own phone next time," a Koryolink saleswoman told me at the airport as we were departing.
(9) Photograph: Family Handout Image The slaying of a young woman, a medical device saleswoman from San Francisco who the Associated Press reported loved travel and dance, on Pier 14, a busy tourist spot, has put the policy under intense scrutiny.
(10) A saleswoman bags up a sale for a customer at Dr Reefer's marijuana dispensary at the University of Colorado, in Boulder.
Saleswomen
Definition:
(pl. ) of Saleswoman
Example Sentences:
(1) Overweight saleswomen were discriminated against more than overweight salesmen.
(2) A lower difference between maximum and minimum frequencies of heart rate in cashiers in comparison with saleswomen confirmed this observation, although it might have resulted from different levels of physical activity during work.
(3) It has sometimes felt as though social workers are dodgy salesmen – or, more often, overburdened saleswomen – stressing the positives and skimming over the challenging, if entirely excusable, character traits of children they are trying to house.
(4) This, taking into account the much higher energy expenditure in saleswomen, suggests that mental effort is likely to affect heart rate.
(5) Along with the history of the Angola Three, Dame Anita's website details her outraged reaction a couple of years ago to L'Oréal's apparent policy of employing only "sexy" saleswomen on its counters.
(6) In fact, mean values of subjective assessment of work demands in cashiers were much higher (5.1) than in saleswomen (4.4), unlike the evaluation of the ability to cope with them, which points to the occurrence of a significant psychic load in the work of cashiers.
(7) On Friday, Koryolink saleswomen were setting up rental booths at Pyongyang's Sunan airport.
(8) No statistically significant differences in heart rate were found to exist between cashiers and saleswomen.
(9) The examinations were carried out at a department store in two groups of women: 20 cashiers (mental work) and 53 saleswomen (physical work).