Las Vegas Review-Journal

Same inquiry to next person seems rude

- MISS MANNERS

DEAR MISS MANNERS:

If a stranger approaches you with a question to which you give a definite answer, and then asks another person right next to you the exact same question for confirmati­on, would this be considered rude?

GENTLE READER: It is, assuming the definite answer was not a refusal. Miss Manners notes, however, that the fluid nature of sidewalk traffic makes it easy for the questioner to avoid this offense.

If this is unavoidabl­e, then a polite second request must acknowledg­e the first answer and imply a reason for the repetition: “Is that what your watch says, as well?” And thanking anyone who gives an answer is a good first step.

DEAR MISS MANNERS:

I organized and paid for a family reunion. This included paying for five hotel rooms for my family, a meal at a restaurant costing $600. After the party, I also did lunches, which I paid for, totaling about $300.

Mind you, I am retired on a fixed income. I had to fly across the country, for which I paid. My family is reluctant to acknowledg­e or thank me.

When I returned, I wrote 23 thank-you notes to them for coming. I mentioned on social media this fact, and the fact that I had received no thank-you notes from any family member. Then I got on social media and found many notes from my family condemning me.

Is it now normal not to send any acknowledg­ment for a kindness given? Is common courtesy now dead??

GENTLE READER: The situation you describe leaves several points to be cleared up, even aside from why you spent so lavishly that you imply it was a hardship.

Writing thank-you letters to your host after an entertainm­ent is, indeed, a requiremen­t of good manners, although the cash outlay involved is irrelevant. Writing thank-you letters to your guests for attending is not. Publicly shaming your guests for a failure to write is both rude and, as you discovered, likely to incite further rudeness.

DEAR MISS MANNERS: At what age is it proper to add “and guest” on an invitation?

GENTLE READER: The question is not the age at which such a designatio­n can properly be added — because the answer is “never” — but at what age it can be dropped. Anyone inviting children to a party must expect the invitation to include someone to bring them and to retrieve them. Once those functions can be accomplish­ed unaided by adult guests, Miss Manners advises you to invite people by name.

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

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