Drinking etiquette is when you are at a social gathering or event and realize you should watch how much you drink so a person doesn't get drunk; say things they may not have said when sober or cause embarrassment for the host or hostess. People who are driving should limit their Alcoholic Beverages to two to three throughout the evening and be sure to eat and if they feel they have had enough to drink to get a DUI then they should call a taxi or have a sober friend bring them home.
The etiquette when drinking out of a teacup is to not fill it all the way to the top, hold the cup with two fingers, take small slow sips and do not slurp.
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
Etiquette 101 - 2004 Wedding Etiquette was released on: USA: 17 August 2008
Charlotte Ford has written: 'Twenty-First-Century Etiquette' -- subject(s): Etiquette 'Etiquette' -- subject(s): Etiquette
etiquette is what, and protocol is when
These mushrooms are quite etiquette!
See related answer :How did Etiquette begin.
Etiquette is the correct spelling.
Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, and AfghanistanDining etiquette in these countries is similar to the rules of dining etiquette in Turkey and Islamic South Asia. The dining etiquette information below presents variations in these countries from the general dining etiquette of Turkey and Islamic South Asia.Dining etiquette for drinking. Tea, or cha, is very popular. Always accept the tea.Dining etiquette for toasts. Make a toast when toasts are made. During the toast maintain strong eye contact.Dining etiquette for interpreting meaning in foods. Many foods have symbolic meaning, especially special foods that are served to honor someone: in Kazakhstan, a sheep or goat is typically slaughtered for a feast in honor of a special guest, and the head of the sheep is the most honored part. In addition, meat from various parts of the head indicate different aspects of the person you serve it to; for example, the tongue means the person is talkative, the ears, that he listens well.
Backstabber Etiquette was created in 2002.
Go to www.usga.org/playing/etiquette/etiquette for a very thorough explaination.