Nope.
Put your napkin on your lap, now!
She would put her napkin in her lap.
You should place your napkin on your lap as soon as you sit down at the table in a restaurant. This signals to the staff that you are ready to begin your meal. If you need to leave the table temporarily, it’s polite to place the napkin on your chair, and when the meal is finished, the napkin should be placed loosely on the table, not on the plate.
if there is a trash can near you, askpolitely'' may i throw my napkin away please'' if the person says yes then throw it away. if there is no trash can ask ''what can i do with my napkin because i don't see a trash can''.
It is three servings usually salad, then main course with vegetables with meat and starch and then finally dessert. You use two special forks and spoons and use proper etiquette manners and put napkin on your lap.
the napkin absorbed the liquid the greatest?
A table napkin is a small square of cloth that is either laid over the lap, or one corner tucked into the clothes below the chin. The idea is to prevent any food falling off the fork from staining the front of the diners clothes. It can also be used to wipe the mouth.
i put the laptop on my lap.
First you take a cup and fill it with witch ever kind of drink you want then you get a stick and put it through a napkin then you put the napkin in straight in the cup then put it in the freezer then wait 3 and a half hours take the napkin of then take the cup of and enjoy!
The cloth napkin should go on your lap to catch any spills. The only time you may use a cloth napkin sticking out of the top of a shirt or blouse is when a restaurant such as the Red Lobster gives you one to catch the butter drips.yeah OK...ignore that top answer, it has nothing to do with the question.John H. Remer, Jr (etiquetteguy.com) states: In a formal situation, when you are seated, you place your napkin in your lap neatly folded with the fold towards you. It does not go back on the table until the end of the meal - ever. Use the napkin for dabbing your mouth - frequently. If you need to rise from the table for any reason such as giving a toast or using the washroom, place the napkin loosely on your chair and push your chair under the table. At the end of the meal, place your napkin loosely on the left side of your place setting as you rise. Do not neatly refold the napkin, nor put it on your plate.But then I found this article from Real Simple magazine:If you leave the table during the meal, loosely fold your napkin and place it on the table to the left of your fork. While some authorities recommend putting the napkin out of sight on the chair, Nathalie Dupree, a cookbook author and the host of the PBS series Nathalie Dupree's Comfortable Entertaining, says, "Napkins are meant to get messy; there's no need to hide them." Besides, the napkin could soil the chair, which could then soil your clothing. At the end of the meal, set your napkin on the table.I think the best solution is to put it in your chair, out of sight. I would just be careful to not eat sloppily so your napkin doesn't leave anything in the chair that you might sit on.
You have to slide the napkin ring into the middle of your napkin. Then when your finished you place the napkin with the ring on it to the left of your plate. I hope that helped :D
put glue in someones shoes or put pepper in someones sandwich