You were so kind to let us use the cabin. The area is beautiful and we were so happy to get away ...” Please send your ...
These are friends of mine, and I do want to entertain them, but I’m afraid I’ll be limiting them to barbecues in the future.
In today's Miss Manners column, advice columnist Judith Martin responds to a host seeks advice on handling friends who arrive without RSVPing.
I am a single man who inherited, from my parents and grandparents, both a love of entertaining and also a great deal of the trappings needed -- china, crystal, linen, silver -- that other relatives ...
We cut our stay short due to the terrible odor, primitive accommodations and insufficient space and privately vowed to never return.
Our friends graciously offered us use of their rustic lakeside cabin, as they no longer can travel there themselves. We had a disappointing time and cut our stay short due to the terrible odor, ...
I hold formal dinner parties with limited place settings. But there are friends who never respond to my invitations and show up anyway. What’s the best way to accommodate them?
My question is how to react when people do not respond to an invitation, nor to a gentle nudge and arrive anyway.
DEAR MISS MANNERS: I am a single man who inherited, from my parents and grandparents, both a love of entertaining and also a great deal of the trappings needed — china, crystal, linen, silver — that ...
Why is it not considered rude to engage me in conversation against my will, but it IS considered rude to tell people you don’t want to talk?
My question is how to react when people do not respond to an invitation, nor to a gentle nudge (such as an emailed “I wondered if you had received this,” with a second copy of the invitation) — and ...