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10sun wrote:my biggest turn on is when a girl has proper table manners.
ESPECIALLY with the napkin... that thing should never return to the table once you put it in your lap even if it is unused.
-Adam
Maeya wrote:10sun wrote:my biggest turn on is when a girl has proper table manners.
ESPECIALLY with the napkin... that thing should never return to the table once you put it in your lap even if it is unused.
-Adam
At the risk of sounding uncultured... what do you do when you're done with your dinner? Leave it on the seat behind you?
Maeya wrote:10sun wrote:my biggest turn on is when a girl has proper table manners.
ESPECIALLY with the napkin... that thing should never return to the table once you put it in your lap even if it is unused.
-Adam
At the risk of sounding uncultured... what do you do when you're done with your dinner? Leave it on the seat behind you?
Narrock wrote:It bugs me when people salt their food before they even taste it.
10sun wrote:Maeya wrote:10sun wrote:my biggest turn on is when a girl has proper table manners.
ESPECIALLY with the napkin... that thing should never return to the table once you put it in your lap even if it is unused.
-Adam
At the risk of sounding uncultured... what do you do when you're done with your dinner? Leave it on the seat behind you?
No, you fold it and place it to the left of your plate when you are ready to leave the table for the evening.
Placing it on the table during the course of the meal indicates that you are finished. If you are getting up to leave the table temporarily, it should be placed on your chair as an indicator to your waiter that you will be back.
Another key thing that I'd say that 95% of the people I have eaten with do not know is you do not cut your dinner rolls with a knife. Break it into reasonable sizes with your hands.
There is also the way that the person holds their knife and fork. I was taught to eat Continental style, but to recognize proper form in American as well.
The way someone approaches their food is incredibly telling about their background.
Narrock wrote:It bugs me when people salt their food before they even taste it.
Zanchief wrote:
God, that's a douchebag thing to say. You don't like a person because their background isn't as proper as yours? Give me a break. What possible difference could it make to your shallow life if someone you're dinning with doesn't know the secret hand-shake of elitism, by putting their napkin in the wrong place?
Etiquette is just a means to demean people who have sense enough not to give a shit about trivial stuff like that.
You're such a poser sometimes, Atensen.
Tikker wrote:it's not elitist to want someone with similar background/standards/social skills
Zanchief wrote:For shame if a women ever put her napkin in the wrong place. That could possibly signal to the waiter that she owes him a yack on the up coming solstice. Then what would you do?!?!
Etiquette is just a list of arbitrary rules put in place to ensure the divide between upper and middle class. To even acknowledge them, let alone require them, is just perpetuating that kind of horrible behaviour.
Tikker wrote:Just like I don't want to go to a hockey game with someone clueless about hockey, why should going out to dinner not follow the same rules?
Zanchief wrote:the proper hand gesture/foot stomp/wink to kick off tea time
lyion wrote:Aren't you a smoker? A smoker worried about good etiquette is like a trailer park owner worried about house values.
10sun wrote:Sorry for being honest, but I was raised to use proper table manners and I respect others who had a shared background. I attend several black tie events throughout the course of every year because of my father's family. Either I take someone who can stand on their own in that sort of social setting or I don't invite them. Sorry for being from a background that requires me to dress up and know proper decorum.
Tae-Bo wrote:10sun wrote:Sorry for being honest, but I was raised to use proper table manners and I respect others who had a shared background. I attend several black tie events throughout the course of every year because of my father's family. Either I take someone who can stand on their own in that sort of social setting or I don't invite them. Sorry for being from a background that requires me to dress up and know proper decorum.
meeper's method of holding a spoon in his clenched fist like a child must have driven you crazy
Gypsiyee wrote:yeah, but as with everything there is a time and a place
to have manners is one thing; to treat a casual dinner with friends at a regular old restaurant as a black tie affair is just pompous.
(sorry I tried to post this like 4 times earlier but it kept timing out)
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