Although they're mostly unwritten, there is a canon of gym etiquette that all gym-goers should recognize. |
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World War Three unfolding at the dinner table was no reason to forget all rules of basic social etiquette. |
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Violating the rules of on-line etiquette, also called netiquette, can also increase the probability of sabotage occurring. |
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Paul immediately identified her as inferior, but his superior breeding made proper etiquette a must. |
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The etiquette of whether one should assist or not assist blind people is somewhat unclear. |
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I also collect books on etiquette from this period because they are just so wonderful. |
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Before you can order at all, you must learn the correct bar-counter etiquette. |
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Despite its potential as a point of connection between theory and comportment, etiquette has been presented in less than favorable light. |
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I lost all decorum of table etiquette as I held the chop between my fingers and picked the bone clean. |
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Unsure of the local etiquette, I'm hesitant to strip down to my BVDs and dive in. |
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No sounds had come from the kitchen, but he knew as etiquette it was not polite to nose around the host's house. |
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Martin is a patient teacher and he familiarises us with sailing etiquette and terminology without overloading us with technical information. |
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Any graphic breach of etiquette will mostly likely be more noticeable in tiny hamlets and upcountry villages. |
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Nor is the point of etiquette to impress your guests with how much you know and they don't about, say, wines or stemware or snail eating. |
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During her childhood, she had been stuck indoors learning social etiquette, among other things, with her older sister Emma. |
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The arrival of haute cuisine advanced culinary options, creating a well constructed gap between the etiquette and habits of the classes. |
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Players will be stripped of titles if they haven't followed the rules of etiquette. |
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But they are clueless when it comes to persuading the users to observe this etiquette. |
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In my opinion, golf etiquette starts long before the first ball is struck off the tee. |
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Then came the horses and riders, cantering at a stately pace, clearly restrained by some mysterious hunt etiquette. |
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I've got an etiquette question because I can't decide if I'm being cheap and greedy or thoroughly modern. |
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Disregarding etiquette, I hoe in with my fingers to ensure that none of the precious flesh is wasted. |
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Political correctness is essentially an etiquette, a series of codes by which we are supposed to live our lives. |
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There was also the whole etiquette of uncovering your head in the presence of your betters and men doffing their hats to ladies and so forth. |
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It was an extraordinary breach of European epicurean etiquette that could not be allowed to go unchallenged. |
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If the divertissement and the etiquette were excellent derivatives, Church music had also its role to maintain. |
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And then, there is his complete disregard for the five-star etiquette of everyone around us. |
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I was fortunate enough to dine as a guest of the restaurant and therefore etiquette demands that I don't review the meal. |
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Adherence to basic etiquette and civility in negotiating can help a great deal since etiquette does grease the wheels of a civil society. |
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From an early age, children are trained in etiquette and the social graces. |
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In public houses, appropriate etiquette includes not gesturing for service. |
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Here's an opportunity to know the right etiquette and protocol for different occasions. |
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The film that follows is a dark, dryly humorous critique of class privilege and artful etiquette. |
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The etiquette rule is to use the furthest outside one as the different courses are served, but that is easier said than done. |
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Many of the most important rules of etiquette serve to mark differences in social rank. |
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They take their glasses delicately by the stems and bring them together in a mock show of etiquette. |
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For some reason, these two rules of etiquette seem to be ignored more than any other. |
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What is the etiquette when the eyes in question are big, and brown, and fringed with generous dark lashes? |
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We were alone in the room and I threw schoolhouse etiquette to the winds and used his first name. |
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The basic code that helps maintain a healthy society is etiquette towards others. |
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He interspersed classes with lessons about the rules and etiquette of the game. |
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Her feet followed his automatically, as a reflex from many hour of being tortured in etiquette, posture, and dance classes. |
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As with the increasing proliferation of mobile phones, we now have an emerging doctrine of iPod etiquette. |
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It is open to boys and girls aged between six and 16 and places as much emphasis on rules and etiquette as it does on playing. |
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My lessons in etiquette failed to explain the correct response so I made my excuses and left as soon as I could. |
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Everyone is all courtesy and etiquette and even the ushers are spectacularly dressed. |
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Ghosters think they're exempt from all forms of texting etiquette and human decency. |
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The strategy seems to be to shame people into conforming to the official anti-racist etiquette. |
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I don't know what the etiquette is on dead wine at adjacent tables, but I know what the etiquette is on waiting tables. |
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Indonesians expect foreign executives to act out elaborate rituals of etiquette as a precondition for establishing a good working relationship. |
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Dropping a loaded firearm is not so much a gross violation of gun etiquette as it is an invitation to a lawsuit. |
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What is the etiquette when one runs across one's brother on an internet message board? |
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A stickler for etiquette, Webb was at home to academicians but saw associates only by appointment. |
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Have you ever wished you knew more about dining etiquette at interview luncheons, holiday dinners and award banquets? |
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The course comprises basic communication skills, group discussion, public speaking, body language, etiquette, and table manners. |
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Social behaviour, table manners and etiquette are being taught by teachers from catering colleges in the city. |
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So, I find myself very well rehearsed in the fine arts of etiquette, including table manners, polite conversation and flattery. |
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The whole atmosphere is one of propriety and etiquette, under which the sordid matters of power and money bubble. |
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I think that the reason he took the trouble to dress formally is because he had a great regard for etiquette. |
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On the trek across the Sahara it was vital that decorum, etiquette and social graces were left at the airport! |
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She is also an ambassador for UNICEF, and has written a series of best-selling books on etiquette for women. |
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I tried to gather the suddenly scattered memories of court etiquette that had been drilled into me since I understood the concept of courtesy. |
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Understand and abide by telecomputing etiquette when using e-mail, newsgroups, listservs and other Internet functions. |
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The trouble is that the murky area of tipping adheres to no rules or etiquette. |
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Politeness and manners were important but etiquette was not a top priority. |
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Years and years of classes taken on manners and etiquette and many lectures from her mother had taught her just how to behave around guests. |
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Every country has its own customs of social etiquette and good manners, and Thailand is no exception. |
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Chicago transit officials say manspreading is part of a larger constellation of etiquette issues that irk riders. |
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The book, emphasising dinner table etiquette and rustic ingenuity remains a best-seller. |
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Indeed, the decorum and etiquette long associated with the game at all levels seem to be losing ground all too quickly. |
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It seems to be the trend to rebel against all forms of tidiness, etiquette and decency. |
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Make a car thief a lottery millionaire and it will not immediately improve his sense of etiquette. |
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Office etiquette nevertheless dictates that you must still croak down the phone when you ring in sick. |
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The telephone is no big deal today, but 60 or 70 years ago learning telephone safety etiquette was a big deal. |
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Despite resistance, the etiquette debate seems to be tilting in the favor of smartphone use, many executives said. |
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Another rule of etiquette is that greetings must precede all forms of social interaction. |
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Every jot and tittle of civilized dining etiquette is but an act of civil religious piety. |
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No one knew exactly what they would be tested on so most of the boys had moved swiftly to the library to look up royal etiquette and manners. |
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While dinner etiquette was never formal, a firm routine had been established for following dinner. |
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Mark mentally brushed up on the formal dinner etiquette he had learned at the various classes his parents had forced him to go to. |
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But leaving aside esoteric question of etiquette all best wishes for future happiness! |
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Anne is not disregarding professional etiquette if she sheds tears with the patient. |
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One important rule of etiquette is to treat guests cordially and hospitably. |
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Remember that good cell phone etiquette is all about providing the user with convenience and security, without intruding on those around you. |
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If it isn't the etiquette and poise classes, then it's the awful skirted uniforms they are forced to wear. |
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Blissfully unaware of pot-smoking etiquette, he proceeds to bogart it down to the ashes. |
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I'm sure she's flouting loads of official and unofficial tube etiquette in one fell swoop here. |
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As a result of this, obeying the rules of e-mail etiquette has become vitally important. |
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It's as if all theory has to be judged by the standards of bourgeois etiquette. |
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Codes and etiquette are no way to deal with issues such as racism, sexism or homophobia. |
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Because of her plain wool dress and basic hairstyle, I had assumed she would not know royal etiquette so in depth. |
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Charles's household ordinances were intended to re-introduce order and decorum into court life by re-establishing the etiquette of Henry VIII's time. |
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Our political etiquette is correct, but our theory is not so perfect. |
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What exactly is the etiquette of sitting next to someone on the train who is noisily and abusively breaking up with their boyfriend on a mobile phone? |
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Manners for wedding etiquette, remember, it's mostly just folk lore. |
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A decorous group of nine panelists presented their positions one at a time, following distinctly un-Israeli rules of etiquette. |
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And literary decorum, to elaborate, is almost the opposite of what decorum means in real life, which means etiquette basically. |
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In The History of the Maghrib, Ralph Mantheim states that the Andalusians introduced court etiquette, formalism and diplomacy into North African society. |
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The key is to recognize that etiquette changes over time and varies across circumstances. |
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McDonough, by all accounts, is highly attuned to protocol and etiquette in hierarchy-minded Washington. |
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As a matter of etiquette, York and Ainsty South had to give permission for hounds from other hunts to attend, as York Minster lies within its area. |
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When you drink with others, it's a Japanese etiquette to pour sake into each other's cup. You should hold your cup up when someone is serving sake to you. |
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Militaristically, the correct etiquette for the bow, what one does and doesn't do, is based on a correct center line axis of the body, as in skiing. |
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There were also discussions regarding manners and etiquette. |
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Lily studies hard for her new roles, reading an etiquette book and changing her hair style from brown to a platinum bride-of-Frankenstein marcelled look. |
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As to the matter of how fast our speeding knight of the road was in fact travelling, various readers were keen to take us to task on the finer points of metric etiquette. |
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Negotiating your way through the flirting etiquette of your average London private member's club, for example, is a social nightmare of bed-hopping, secrets and lies. |
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This is considered an almost unpardonable breach of parliamentary etiquette, according to which the actions of the Whips are not subject to any public scrutiny. |
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Unsurprisingly, morale was low and normal etiquette went up in smoke. |
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Also, etiquette and netiquette are key words here, and your equivalent of shouting out on soapbox isn't gonna bring anything more productive than witty remarks. |
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He will need to get in quick or he will suffer his second bout of regime change and his advisers will need to coach him on correct New Zild etiquette. |
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A stickler for etiquette and social niceties, this is the sign more than any other that is likely to have nightmares over the phrasing of invitations! |
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As for why door blockers, pole huggers and other egregious violators of subway etiquette do not experience the same opprobrium, perhaps another study is in order. |
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Nevertheless, unwritten local etiquette is to keep a respectable distance from the topless bathers and sunbakers as the beaches are large and not crowded. |
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How many people do you trust indefinitely, in a world with no police, no laws, no jails, virtual doomsday devices everywhere, in an honour system based on etiquette? |
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He was an accomplished bushman, a great drinker and swearer, short-tempered and generous-hearted, a man not to be contained by parliamentary etiquette. |
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Know the seating plan and etiquette before boarding the company jet. |
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The etiquette at contradances is that for every dance people generally change partners and dance with someone else, even if you do come with a partner. |
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Indeed, the handshake has permeated our culture, our etiquette, our daily lives, to become perhaps our most important non-verbal communicative contrivance. |
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There is a lack of basic etiquette while conversing over mobile phones. |
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Is there some formal expression of etiquette that is appropriate here? |
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Here, one must maintain discipline, proper etiquette, and formality. |
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The equation between proper dress and proper speech is made explicitly in Victorian etiquette manuals, where proprieties of language are spoken of as if they were cosmetics. |
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A good communicator masters the rules of etiquette and good manners since these are what grease the wheels of effective interpersonal relationships. |
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But today the egregiousness threshold has been lowered and the ecumenical etiquette bar has been raised, so one withholds both consent and dissent. |
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The family and those taking the roles of servants were provided with advice manuals, etiquette guides and recipe books that would have been in the house at the time. |
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Even outside the convent her actions were governed by the strict etiquette of the royal court of Portugal. |
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And his cultured style in polishing off his cone meant he'd certainly outpoll little Hugh Guy, two, in the etiquette stakes. |
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Nehru who usually spoke calmly, peacefully and with international etiquette, spoke losing his composure, 'You are a total communalist. |
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The works confound stereotypes of Japanese etiquette, even as they update the tradition of the anatomically explicit shunga print. |
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There is a strict code of conduct governing behaviour on the grouse moor for both safety and etiquette. |
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Cycling's complex etiquette contains an unwritten rule that riders in contention for a race win should not be penalised for sheer misfortune. |
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Europeans brought English fashion etiquette to New Zealand, and until the 1950s most people dressed up for social occasions. |
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Its language, arts, and etiquette are regarded as the island's most refined and exemplary. |
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The Chinese dining etiquette has that youths should not sit at the table before the elders. |
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To continue playing when a team has no realistic chance of winning can be seen as a breach of etiquette. |
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Many had never been to Britain, yet they imitated British styles of dress, dance, and etiquette. |
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The rash of celebrities flashing their nether regions worries Peter Post, director of the Emily Post Institute of etiquette and manners. |
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In addition to those specific to the Dutch, many general points of European etiquette apply to the Dutch as well. |
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The Dutch have a code of etiquette which governs social behaviour and is considered important. |
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The book includes the history of fondue and important information on types of pots and heat sources, menu planning and fondue etiquette. |
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Well, in the name of good TV previewer etiquette, we're not about to reveal what happens. |
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The seminar covered topics such as confidence building, power dressing, business etiquette and communicating for results. |
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A Tennessee can collector is being recognized for dumpster diving etiquette. |
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In addition to the officially printed rules, golfers also abide by a set of guidelines called golf etiquette. |
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Other members of the mounted field follow strict rules of clothing etiquette. |
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The referee may also issue to take away points or games due to improper etiquette regarding conduct or rules. |
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Education would begin at home, where children were taught the basic etiquette of proper manners and respecting others. |
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Colorful beach signs point tourists to the underwater trail head, while reminding them of proper marine etiquette. |
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But despite what it looked like, there was a certain etiquette in the mosh pit. |
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Located in the heart of Long Beach, the tearoom offers daily teatimes as well as etiquette classes for kids and adults. |
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Perhaps then, the White House just had a bad week of etiquette. |
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A few skills, some common sense and a little etiquette and your trailer rig won't be someone else's ball and chain. |
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If you are not sure of the proper etiquette, watch what others do and follow suit. |
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Burns' political sentiments were already clearly delineated in 'A Dream' and no amount of etiquette could unpublish that poem. |
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It's a bit like urinal etiquette in which, upon entering the bogs you are obliged to choose the Urinal of Conspicuous Heterosexuality. |
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A sampling of topics turns up birth and death statements, colophon, letterforms or allographs, primitive codicology and palaeography, quire, scribal etiquette, and vignette. |
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After someone has spoken, it is generally considered good etiquette to allow a few minutes pass in silence before further vocal ministry is given. |
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Whenever Root would put his elbows on the table or clatter his dishes or commit any other breach of etiquette, the Professor would gently correct him. |
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SpinVox, the leader in voice-to-text services, has used its expertise in mobile phone and voicemail etiquette to name the United Kingdom's top ten most annoying voicemails. |
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Certain etiquette may be involved in the playing of a country's anthem. |
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Hardcore and metal crowds are amazing to watch, they look like they are knocking lumps out of each other in the mosh pits but everyone adheres to mosh pit etiquette. |
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They would understand one another's food, dress, manner, and etiquette, and even borrow words, phrases, idioms and, at times, whole languages from others. |
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Birdwatching etiquette is evolving in response to this concern. |
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Maybe that's why its considered bad etiquette to MST without permission. |
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However, when the old man in question is Arnold Palmer and the invitation is to the Arnold Palmer Invitational, normal etiquette goes out of the window. |
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Contact with other cultures has affected Indian dining etiquette. |
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Common golf etiquette shown on a golf course would be actions such as raking bunkers, repairing pitch marks, adhering to the pace of play and filling in divots. |
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Since the Victorian era, authorities on tartan have stated that there is an etiquette to wearing tartan, specifically tartan attributed to clans or families. |
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Proficiency in teaching golf instruction requires not only technical and physical ability but also knowledge of the rules and etiquette of the game. |
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Though there are no penalties for breach of etiquette rules, players generally follow the rules of golf etiquette in an effort to improve everyone's playing experience. |
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Overfamiliarity towards your boss or work colleagues is bad etiquette. |
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Rielly, Karate For Kids is a simple but complete introduction to the fitness, self-defense, movements, philosophies, and etiquette of karate for young people. |
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In its modern sense including personal writing materials, stationery has been an important part of good social etiquette, particularly since the Victorian era. |
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