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DEAR MISS MANNERS: I have a tremor in my hands, worse in my dominant hand, and it affects my table manners. In public, I try ...
Please send your questions to Miss Manners at her website, www.missmanners.com; to her email, [email protected]; ...
Dining table etiquette is an integral part of social interactions, be it at a formal dinner or a casual family meal ...
DEAR MISS MANNERS: I am a teetotaler. My husband and most of our friends are avid connoisseurs of wine and spirits. Normally, ...
Dear Miss Manners: A very long time ago, my husband and I were invited to dinner at a restaurant by a colleague of his. I had ...
The wife shut me down immediately with something along the lines of, “I’d rather listen to what the men are talking about.” ...
Of course, outside of simply being good table manners, adopting habits centered around giving back, helping people, and engaging in small acts of kindness, even if it’s at your family dinner ...
DEAR MISS MANNERS: What is the proper dining etiquette with regard to the hand that is not holding a utensil? When we traveled to Europe, the locals did not like that my unused arm was in my lap ...
In today's Miss Manners column, advice columnist Judith Martin responds to handling dripping glasses at a restaurant.
In America, it is proper to keep the unused hand in one’s lap; in Europe, it is rested on the table. In neither part of the world is it polite to characterize others’ manners as rude. And Miss Manners ...
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