I recommend against it, because many churches are dismally acoustic. Any little sound echoes for a minimum of thirty seconds after the sound is made.
It is more polite to sneeze by facing your head down the ground.
I think that people sneeze quietly because they want to be polite to people and they don't want no one else to hear their sneeze
No.
It would be the polite thing to do.
yes! It's something to be celebrated and even though they didnt invite you, you can still be polite about it.
Bridezilla is a less-than-polite term to describe a bride to be who causes much animosity for her wedding party, friends and family during the planning of the wedding and sometimes even during the wedding.
It is considered polite to address a wedding card to both people who were married.
If it's okay with her, it's fine with me. If her second husband objects, and he's either still married to her or was married to her when she died, it would probably be polite not to.
If you sneeze on a Tuesday, you will kiss a stranger. The whole rhyme goes: If you sneeze on Monday, you sneeze for danger; Sneeze on a Tuesday, kiss a stranger; Sneeze on a Wednesday, sneeze for a letter; Sneeze on a Thursday, something better; Sneeze on a Friday, sneeze for sorrow; Sneeze on a Saturday, see your sweetheart to-morrow.
Because when you sneeze the sound you make is "SNEEZE!" ^No, it really isn't. I've not heard one person say "SNEEZE" when they sneeze, ever in my life. I've heard people say "Achoo", "Atishoo" and other ones, but never "SNEEZE".
sleeve
you sneeze