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Criminal "gentleman"

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xstitcher | 06:35 Mon 09th Dec 2013 | ChatterBank
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Good Morning All, Has anyone else ever wondered why the newsreaders quite often refer to a man who is involved in some type of criminal offense as a "gentleman" while a woman in the same situation is a woman and never referred to as a lady?

I would say that they definitely are NOT gentlemen.
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I've never heard anyone like that referred to as a gentleman. I have noticed that they often refer to 17 or 18 year old males as "men", but females of a similar age are "girls". I'm not sure why.
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I think the term girls seems to stick with us our entire lives Cloverjo. ...girls night out....lunch with the girls.....hmmmmm
They often call young men 'youths' and young women as 'girls'. Never heard the gentlemen reference.
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I just read one on here in connection with a pub brawl where one "gentleman hit etc......."
My Granny was in service to some very posh, titled families in her youth. She always said that real toffs never called a female a "lady", the correct term is "woman". It was only the middle class snobs that used "lady".

Surely the last gentleman criminal was Raffles and that's going back a bit.
I find it odd when the media reports a 17 year old "youth" has attacked a 19 year old "boy".
I haven't heard them called gentlemen since the days of Raffles either. You must have quaite refained newsreaders in your region!
I've never heard them called that either. Females are always girls until 18, then women. Males are called boys, then men at 18.
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Today I got charged for 3 counts of ABH. It was incident that occured just after xmas, in which 3 gentleman started abusing a friend for his hair colour, basically calling him ginger and so forth. My...

Just to show what I am talking about............copied from AB
I think it's used ironically, as in 'the Honourable MP for East Trumpton' etc

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Criminal "gentleman"

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