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working girls

n. (working girl English)

Wikipedia
Working Girls (1986 film)

Working Girls is a 1986 independent film, written, produced and directed by Lizzie Borden, depicting a day in the life of upper class prostitutes in a small Manhattan bordello. It was considered by some a feminist portrayal.

It was nominated for the 1987 Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival, and won the Special Jury Prize.

Working Girls (2010 film)

Working Girls is a 2010 Filipino comedy film remake starring Eugene Domingo, Jennylyn Mercado, Iza Calzado, Cristine Reyes, Bianca King, Eula Valdez and Ruffa Gutierrez. Directed by Jose Javier Reyes, from a screenplay by Amado Lacuesta, it was produced by GMA Films, Viva Films, and Unitel Pictures and released to cinemas on April 21, 2010 in the Philippines.

Working Girls (1931 film)

Working Girls is a 1931 American pre-Code drama film directed by Dorothy Arzner and written by Zoƫ Akins, based on the play Blind Mice, written by Vera Caspary and Winifred Lenihan. The film stars Judith Wood, Dorothy Hall, Charles 'Buddy' Rogers, Paul Lukas, Stuart Erwin, and Frances Dee. The film was released on December 12, 1931, by Paramount Pictures.

Usage examples of "working girls".

Bayswater is a place where working girls who lead independent lives enjoy themselves.

Leaders of the smart set rubbed elbows, and seemed to enjoy it, with working girls and agitators.

Overheated coffee, overheated flesh, the cheap perfume hovering around a pair of working girls who lounged resignedly on a nearby bench.

Home was room in a grimy tenement she shared with two other working girls, a third floor walk-up with a bathroom down the hall.

Two working girls, pink-faced and blonde in shawls and long dark smocks, pass him as they ascend, giggling and trying to flirt with him, but he is oblivious to them, for all the sharp clack of their clogs.

This was my first contact with working girls as a group, and frankly I was apprehensive about mixing at first.