Embarassing or insulting someone with no provocation.
The phrase pronounced (foh pah) is the French faux pas (a social or etiquette error).
The phrase faux pas is from the French for false step, and usually means an error in etiquette, or a possibly embarrassing social blunder.
No, correct and incorrect are not the same thing. Correct means right, proper, appropriate, according to protocol, according to etiquette Incorrect means wrong, mistaken, error, improper, against protocol, not consistent with good etiquette
Error 2032 is a real pain and it does appear sometimes. You can't actually fix it, which is the worst part.
Etiquette 101 - 2004 Wedding Etiquette was released on: USA: 17 August 2008
Etiquette 101 - 2004 Dining Etiquette was released on: USA: 16 December 2006
Etiquette 101 - 2004 Etiquette for Everyone was released on: USA: 19 November 2005
Charlotte Ford has written: 'Twenty-First-Century Etiquette' -- subject(s): Etiquette 'Etiquette' -- subject(s): Etiquette
etiquette is what, and protocol is when
See related answer :How did Etiquette begin.
Etiquette is the correct spelling.
These mushrooms are quite etiquette!