Back in the days, people aren't afraid to call fat people "chubby" - not even a company that made its name selling fashionable plus-size clothing and lingerie to women! Here's a vintage Lane Bryant ad selling "charming Chubby-size Clothes" for "girls and teens too chubby to fit into regular sizes"
The scars will *never* heal ... NEVER!!!
Isn't that about average nowadays?
(I was just discussing yesterday the mix of sorrow and joy I feel when I see "Pretty Plus" Girl Scout uniforms. I feel bad for the 10 year olds who must wear them, but thrilled that I can get one in my size...WOO HOOO!)
@amanderpanderer- On the thought of modern day terms, I never considered 'plus size' as all that insulting before, since it was about the clothing sizes (do please bring 'chubby' back, though). But I definitely agree about 'pretty plus.' That really does seem to refer to the wearer instead of the clothes.
Guys really don't have it that bad, I guess. Getting nice clothes in our sizes just means shopping at a 'big & tall' store.
One wonders when this trend will end; it is already possible to buy a size 00. Eventually, will we all be sized in varying numbers of zeros, I wonder?
I would have thought that the apostrophe before the word "Teen" is perfectly okay if the word isn't in common usage the way it is in the USA (it's not that common in the UK yet) today. 'Teen is short for sixteen (or seventeen, or eighteen, etc).
What is offensive is the capitalisation. If it is an abbreviation of sixteen it should be a lower case "t". But, it is in a heading so I'm not sure if you should apply grammar too stringently.
@amanderpanderer
Does that mean I can get a girl scout uniform for my girlfriend (who no longer has hers) in the states? Is that wrong?