Be yourself
Please practice proper etiquette when in public.
Geisha are very proper well behaved Japanese ladies. They are always on their best behavior, they are very polite, even to the point of shyness; with the younger Maiko and Geisha.
Yes. It is proper etiquette, although it is also common for them to decline (but that probably depends on your relationship with him/her).
It's proper etiquette to place a napkin on ones lap before eating. As a gentleman, he followed proper etiquette and opened the door for his wife. Ignoring proper etiquette, he started eating before anyone else at the table had been served. To comply with accepted etiquette, he shut his phone off before the church service began.
Etiquette refers to ones behavior; it is one that is usually prescribed for ones job, profession, duty, gathering, party, etc.To have proper etiquette, one must showcase behavior that is suitable and appropriate for said event, profession, or otherwise. In other words, proper etiquette means suitable behavior.
If the burial is private in Switzerland it considered proper etiquette to publish the obituary after the funeral. If the burial is to be made public, the proper etiquette is to publish an obituary a few days before the funeral.
Geisha are living, breathing works of art. They are walking perfection. They go through the proper training to become a Geisha so they can carry on hundreds of years of Japanese tradition.
Exactly the same as the etiquette required by any other nationality
Using proper etiquette on the Internet, including in e-mails, is called "Netiquette".
etiquette protocol
It is almost impossible for a western girl to become a Geisha. Geisha are only Japanese females, and they begin their training around the age of 16. There have been two instances that non-Japanese women have been allowed to become Geisha, and that is because they were being near the Geisha as a study, and the Geisha took them under their wing and allowed them to go through the process. If you would like to become more like a Geisha, take lessons on manners, etiquette, poise, as well as Japanese dance, poetry, conversation skills, and classic Japanese instruments.