Quotes About Manners
The person serving feels inferior to the person being served so they try and show they are important by being rude.
~ Sarah Turnbull
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One of the French officers was horrified that at a dinner in Washington's tent, His Excellency served the meal not in a succession of courses like in civilization. Apparently Washington "gave, on the same plate, meat, vegetables, and salad." On the same plate? Were these Americans people or animals?
~ Sarah Vowell
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I would define an asshole as anyone who chooses to make the lives of others less pleasant for reasons that don't appear productive or necessary.
~ Scott Adams
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When you don't know everything that you could know, it's a fine time to shut your fucking noisemaker and be polite.
~ Scott Lynch
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You'd best ask the lady boffin, sir," Newkirk said. "Midshipmen aren't allowed to have opinions.
~ Scott Westerfeld
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Im Deutschen lügt man, wenn man höflich ist.
~ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
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Mit Frauen soll man sich nie unterstehn zu scherzen." - Mephistopheles
~ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
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Donde no hay mujeres no existen los buenos modales
~ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
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Quando si vive con persone che hanno una delicata sensibilità per la convenienza, abbiamo paura per loro se incontrano qualcosa di sconveniente.
~ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
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May I speak with his mother?" "Of course,follow me." The butler didn't go far,stopping at the door to the dining room to announce loftily, "Lady St. John has arrived, madam." Rebecca heard a testy tone, from inside the room. "Are you blind, Charles? I'm sitting right here." "The new Lady St. John.
~ Johanna Lindsey
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Is man a savage at heart, skinned o'er with fragile Manners? Or is savagery but a faint taint in the natural man's gentility, which erupts now and again like pimples on an angel's arse?
~ John Barth
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I came on my mother shedding a few tears in the drawing room. My mother had hastily blown her nose and spoken to me in an irritated way—a rare thing for her. I knew she knew she should not have been doing it—such demonstrations either of grief or happiness were not the thing at all—and so I was not upset by her crossness, feeling that we had been caught out, as it were, together, and that we must both do better in future.
~ John Bayley
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Oh, by the way," he said, "you might bring Lewis a glass of iced tea, and get me a refill. No sugar. And bring out another plate of chocolate-chip cookies." Mrs. Zimmermann stood up and clasped her hands subserviently in front of her. "How would you like your cookies, sir? Stuffed down your throat one by one, or crumbled up and sifted into your shirt collar?
~ John Bellairs
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We have a saying: If you go to Atlanta, the first question people ask you is, 'What's your business?' In Macon they ask, 'Where do you go to church?' In Augusta they ask your grandmother's maiden name. But in Savannah the first question people ask you is 'What would you like to drink?
~ John Berendt
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In his heart, he knew that there was no reason to be impolite to someone, even if they did work for you. There was such a thing as manners after all.
~ John Boyne
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Heil Hitler ," he said, which, he presumed, was another way of saying, "Well, goodbye for now, have a pleasant afternoon.
~ John Boyne
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psychologists are too polite with one another's ideas.
~ John Brockman
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You've just inherited rudeness. We've had to work at it.
~ John Connolly
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Mr. Renfield didn't like the Abernathys, exactly, but a funny thing about adults is that they will spend time with people they don't like very much if they think it might benefit them.
~ John Connolly
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We have gone from holding the door out of courtesy to standing before it out of obliviousness.
~ John Dickerson
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I beg your pardon," said Abbot. "You are quite right, of course. I am not myself fond of bad taste, though I am always displaying it. Go on.
~ John Dickson Carr
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Duplicity is necessary in daily life, in that it covers many unpleasant things from sight, so they may not disturb the pleasure of others.
~ Edouard Rene de Laboulaye
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As for opinions, if they're not pleasant they'd better be kept to yourself. I learned that early in life and forget it every day.
~ Kate Langley Bosher
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She did not suddenly start being disagreeable this afternoon, she was so good at it, she had evidently practised whatever are the scales and arpeggios of rudeness every day of her life.
~ Rebecca West
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