Las Vegas Review-Journal

Traffic maneuver likely dangerous, rude

- JUDITH MARTIN MISS MANNERS Submit your etiquette questions to Miss Manners at dearmissma­nners@gmail.com.

DEAR MISS MANNERS:

We all know that cutting in line is rude. At grocery stores, we line up nicely, as at banks. Why then, when we are driving, do some people insist on cutting?

I’m referring to those times when a constructi­on zone is ahead, and we are supposed to move into one lane. Most cars do, but a few will use the still-available free lane to zoom ahead and scoot in in front of the polite (or gullible) drivers. As a result, the rest of us behind end up going even slower.

I have tried something that my husband claims is dangerous. Perhaps it is — but is it also rude? When there are only two lanes going in my direction, and I see a long line ahead in one lane — and when I know that all traffic in the other lane will eventually have to merge, as there is no exit ahead — I move into the free lane. But instead of zipping ahead, I stay slow, going at the same speed as of the rest of the traffic. I’m not cutting, but I am keeping others from cutting in front of me.

When I get to the very front, I then signal to merge back in. I may have to wait, but only for a car or two, instead of the many that would have cut.

Do I merely risk being shot at by an angry and rude driver, or am I also being impolite?

GENTLE READER: Miss Manners agrees with you how bizarre this is in otherwise polite and sweet-tempered individual­s. The underlying tenets of manners do not change on the highway, which means that while she agrees that it is rude to cut in line, it is also rude to call other drivers rude.

While you could claim that your solution does not do that, we both know what is in your heart. Fortunatel­y, etiquette does not probe there.

DEAR MISS MANNERS: I am a student living on campus. When I am having a conversati­on with someone and an acquaintan­ce walks by, I usually wave or smile at the other person; this seems preferable to pretending not to see someone.

However, when I was speaking to a friend the other day, and she waved to someone else, I felt that she wasn’t listening to what I was saying.

GENTLE READER: A very modest addition to your usual behavior will solve the problem: A quick “Sorry” when you turn back to the speaker should be sufficient to acknowledg­e that no rudeness was intended to anyone. Miss Manners prefers this to the other option: pretending not to notice the world around you.

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