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I got into a long conversation about silverware while I was in Portugal last week. When you were growing up, did you learn the way to set your silverware on the plate to indicate that you were done or indicate that you were still eating?
Mirrored from Under the Beret.
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Also, the way you set your silverware on your plate means something? What? Weird.
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I always do the latter when I eat in a restaurant. It honestly annoys me a bit when wait staff still ask "are you finished with that?" or "may I take your plate?" but then again I know most people aren't trained in that kind of etiquette so it probably isn't entirely safe to assume.
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I am pretty absolutely certain that i did not learn this from my family. Having gracious table manners wasn't something my people generally cared about (so long as you weren't, like, outright rude or piggish), altho' occasionally i recall someone being mocked because they held their fork in a strange way. Families are weird.
I did eventually learn gracious table manners, because one of my dearest friends in college came from relatively fancy people in Maryland, so she was like, "if you want to learn, i'll show you what i know." People still occasionally comment that i have really nice table manners, and honesty i just feel awkward about it — altho' at least it came in handy on the rare occasions i've had to sit at a table with fancy people during work dinners, as it gives me one less class thing to be anxious about.
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