But it's cute on him.
Isn't everything cute on him? I've only seen Garcia a couple times because I don't really watch the show. So Hardison gets my vote.
We have no dress code at our office and in the summer barely there tank tops and short shorts are perfectly acceptable. If we have to go to a client office we make ourselves decent but still find jeans and a company shirt works well enough. Florida casual.
Do people ask you about your shirts, Kat? I'm trying to think when the last time I wore my PGJ was. When I wore my b.org Security shirt last time, someone did ask me if I did security. I guess I have that face. Or that back.
I think I've mentioned that my crazy semi-boss comes to work in track suits sometimes. She's at the far end of the spectrum (because: crazy) and obviously some of us privately think it's inappropriate, but I doubt anyone's ever spoken to her about it.
The unofficial dress code varies a bit by department but unless a client or upper management is involved, I think the average is probably one step below business casual.
How do we feel about "shall"? I just got an email from a stranger with whom I'll be working in the future. As far as I know he's American, but he says, "I shall definitely use this service" and then uses it again in the next paragraph. Pretentious, secretly English, or what?
As far as I know he's American, but he says, "I shall definitely use this service" and then uses it again in the next paragraph. Pretentious, secretly English, or what?
Has to write a lot of business requirements?
Flea keeps asking questions I'm not allowed to answer. Harrumph.
The dress code at my office is you have to be dressed. People pretty much wear whatever they want.
Well, you have the shirt which is probably why they asked!
Sometimes. I think the PGJ shirt was paired with a skirt that had pink gingham trim and black stars and I had cowboy boots. More people were dealing with overload on the boots that the shirt doesn't even register.
My other shirts say things like, "I'm a NOUN!" or "Shakespeare Hates Your Emo Poems" or "Bad Grammar Makes Me [Sic]" so they are at least contextually correct.
Shall always seems more like a question. Like, "What shall I do today?" But it would ping me as odd used twice in an email. Once, probably not so much.