Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nose-blowing at table a great debate

- MISS MANNERS

DEAR MISS MANNERS:

I was out with a lady friend of mine when my nose started to run. I pulled out my handkerchi­ef and blew my nose. She then told me that it is rude to do so at the table.

This is the first time in my 59 years of living that I ever heard such a thing. Is she right? I would not ever mean to be rude.

GENTLE READER: And you have doubts about how polite it would be to sit there letting your nose drip?

Miss Manners receives lots of complaints about nose-blowing, but such denunciati­ons are never accompanie­d by alternativ­e suggestion­s.

She presumes that it is when the blowing is accompanie­d by unattracti­ve honking that it offends. Perhaps you can learn to blow discreetly and quietly.

But unpleasant noises that have no place at the table include accusation­s of rudeness lobbed at one’s fellow diners.

DEAR MISS MANNERS: As a physician, I recommend strongly against allowing others to try on one’s rings.

One evening, two distraught young women came into the emergency room where I was working. One, newly engaged, had allowed the other to try on her ring. The ring became stuck and could not be removed. The finger was beginning to swell.

Fortunatel­y, using a stout thread and a great quantity of soap, I was able to remove the ring without cutting off either the ring or the finger.

GENTLE READER: Even without the appalling threat of losing a finger or smashing a ring, Miss Manners considers this a bad idea.

She presumes that the newly engaged lady was not offering to toss her ring around. It is more plausible, although still rude, that a guest had asked to try it on.

DEAR MISS MANNERS: I’m seeing restaurant­s place napkins to the right side of where a plate will go, instead of to the left. Sometimes all the silverware, including the fork, will be on the napkin to the right side.

Have I missed something? I thought napkins were placed on the left side of the plate. You will see tables set with napkins laid vertically on the plate also, which I assume is correct and something fancy to do on occasion.

GENTLE READER: Napkins do belong to the left of the forks or centered on the service plate. Restaurant­s and stylists may have nothing better to do than to mess around with the correct placement, but Miss Manners does, so there has been no change since you learned to set the table correctly.

Submit your etiquette questions to Miss Manners at dearmissma­nners@gmail. com.

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