In today's Miss Manners column, advice columnist Judith Martin responds to whether guests can influence the invitation list ...
DEAR MISS MANNERS: At a dinner event I attended at a hotel, the tables were 10-foot rounds with tablecloths that went to the ...
DEAR MISS MANNERS: We are a blended family. I invited our adult children to Thanksgiving. They responded by asking if “other ...
In today's Miss Manners column, advice columnist Judith Martin responds to a reader's question about using tablecloths as lap ...
DEAR MISS MANNERS: We are a blended family. I invited our adult children to Thanksgiving. They responded by asking if “other ...
True, it specifically prohibited using the tablecloth to clean one’s teeth, and your dinner companion was at least not guilty of that. Nevertheless, the rule should be understood in a broader sense: ...
True, it specifically prohibited using the tablecloth to clean one’s teeth, and your dinner companion was at least not guilty of that. Nevertheless, the rule should be understood in a broader sense: ...
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Well, That's a New One
Would Miss Manners provide guidance on this practice? GENTLE READER: George Washington already did! Much earlier in life, as a schoolboy, he had copied down a list of etiquette rules circulated by ...
General Washington, as he correctly wished to be called after his presidency, was a master etiquetteer. It was he who issued ...
DEAR MISS MANNERS: We are a blended family. I invited our adult children to Thanksgiving. They responded by asking if “other ...
The woman sitting next to me pulled the tablecloth up and set it on her lap, proudly saying that she wasn’t going to get any food on her gown.
The woman sitting next to me pulled the tablecloth up from the floor and set it on her lap, proudly saying that she wasn’t ...
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