0 a permanent wave in a person’s hair -- keriting
She’s had a perm.
1 to give a permanent wave to (hair) -- mengeritingkan
She’s had her hair permed.
The other point is that before we can get the production of this country on its legs we must raise the production perm an-hour somehow.
You can perm any 10 from 100 and all the papers have been churned out already.
That being so, why this attack on "home-perms"?
I would perm them in favour of those which relate to the harm test based on prejudice in one way or another.
The "perm" is a little expensive, and one has to think carefully whether one can afford another for many months.
A penalty clause—one that makes it more expensive to recruit someone via a temp to perm arrangement—might well require some regulations.
Secondly, through the confusion it is designed to lead to a situation where one is perming any number of hours out of 24.
The offers read like a full perm on a football pool coupon.