Etiquette is french for a tag (i.e. a price tag).
The word etiquette is an abstract noun. Etiquette has no substance, it's something that you know or understand.
Etiquettes
Etiquette is the conventional rule for conduct or behavior in polite society. SENTENCE EXAMPLE: 'Etiquette requires a man to rise when a lady enters the room.' Content Added - 09/30/08 I'm not sure if you mean a sentence using the word,, or more of a sentence to somewhat describe it. But Emily Post always has the answers! "Manners are a sensitive awareness of the feelings of others. If you have that awareness, you have good manners, no matter what fork you use." - Emily Post You suck Emily post.
The stress is on the first syllable. ET-i-quette.
Etiquette is the correct spelling.
The word etiquette is a noun. The plural form is etiquettes.
The word etiquette is an abstract noun. Etiquette has no substance, it's something that you know or understand.
The word etiquette is an abstract noun. Etiquette has no substance, it's something that you know or understand.
Wiping your nose on your sleeve is a shocking lack of etiquette.
Her failure to respond to the invitation showed a lack of etiquette.
Ettiquette- manners It is good etiquette to chew with your mouth closed. wikirocks (>_<*)
It is etiquette
Etiquettes
Etiquette
etiquette protocol
My brother did not act as a gentleman at the table, so Mother made him practice his etiquette.
The word etiquette is a noun. Nouns don't have tenses. Nouns are singular or plural, common or proper, concrete or abstract. Verbs have tenses, there is no verb form for etiquette. The noun etiquette is a singular, common, abstract noun.