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Miss Manners chooses to believe that you only made an unfortunate word choice, not that you believe that it is an honor for a ...
Miss Manners asks, "Why is it that your friends are dictating what time they show up at your house in the first place?" ...
I have not worn any kind of nail polish since I was in my 20s. I do not want to polish my toenails, or my fingernails, either ...
I had no input as to how big this shower has become, and being asked — no, told — to pay for it strikes me as inappropriate.
DEAR MISS MANNERS: All the bridesmaids for an upcoming wedding recently received a note from the bride’s mother stating that ...
"Ms." is an abbreviation of the honorific “Mistress,” which was the respectable equivalent of “Mister,” to be used regardless of marital status.
In today's Miss Manners column, advice columnist Judith Martin responds to the proper title for a married women who is ...
Bridesmaids are supposedly chosen because they are the dearest people to the bride. Why, then, are they considered ...
She decides, for whatever reason, to retain her maiden name. She is still deserving of the married honorific, is she not?
One bridesmaid says she didn't have any input on the shower's size and scope, why should she have to help fund it?
DEAR MISS MANNERS: A car wash I patronize has two single-occupant washrooms, one labeled “Men,” the other “Ladies.” I had ...
Miss Manners: There’s a reason this important honorific exists, and there’s a good chance you forgot
Miss Manners chooses to believe that you only made an unfortunate word choice, not that you believe that it is an honor for a lady to be married, and that the title “Mrs.” reflects that.
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