The main idea of this passage could be summarized in which sentence?
A Waiters are servants and should be treated accordingly at all times.Waiters are servants and should be treated accordingly at all times.
B Follow the rules of etiquette when giving or attending a dinner party.Follow the rules of etiquette when giving or attending a dinner party.
C Fish is a difficult item to serve and eat when dining out or at home.Fish is a difficult item to serve and eat when dining out or at home.
D Knowing how to eat helps avoid ignorance and makes you a pleasant guest.Knowing how to eat helps avoid ignorance and makes you a pleasant guest.



Answer :

The main idea of this passage could be summarized in which sentence option  D Knowing how to eat helps avoid ignorance and makes you a pleasant guest.

What is the book about?

The book is one that is titled  a "TASTE OF VICTORIAN DINNER ETIQUETTE".

The Victorian etiquette is known to be those Basic etiquette that cannot be altered over the past 100 years.

Its example is do chew food with your mouth closed and always keep your elbows out of the table as well as others.

There are other rules that a person need to master prior eating in a Victorian social setting and it is Never for a person to eat very fast. Therefore, The main idea of this passage could be summarized in which sentence option  D Knowing how to eat helps avoid ignorance and makes you a pleasant guest.

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1 It is in bad taste to apologize to the waiters for the trouble given them, and betrays a lamentable ignorance of the customs of society. They are hired to wait upon the guests, and it is no affair of those guests how they feel, as long as they discharge their duty. To reprove a waiter is the height of ill-breeding.

2 Do not, when a dish is brought to you, say you prefer to be helped after some one else. Accept or refuse what is offered to you, and let the waiter pass the dish on. A gentleman, however, will see that the lady he has escorted to the table is helped as she wishes, before he attends to his own dinner, but to interfere with the lady on the other side of him is all insult to her escort. He may ask the lady under his care if she will be helped from any dish offered him, before he accepts or declines for himself, and will issue her orders for her to the waiter when she selects her dinner.

3 A gentleman or a lady will always say "Thank you" to a waiter, but nothing more.

4 A guest must never find fault with any dish placed before him, and to appear to question the quality or freshness of the viands by smelling or fastidiously tasting them, is a positive insult to the gentleman who has invited him to his table.

5 A host or hostess may never find fault before their guests, neither with the dinner, with the servants, nor with each other. Burnt soup, fish boiled to rags, underdone vegetables, heavy pastry, must be endured with smiling equanimity. No scowl must greet the crash that announces the fall of a tray of the finest glass, no word of remonstrance greet the deluge of a plate of soup over the tablecloth. If care has not been taken to secure first- rate cooks and well-trained waiters, the faults of omission and commission must be endured with placid serenity.

6 After the ladies have all been served, the guests to the right of the hostess must be attended to, then the guest on her left, and so on until all are served. Ten persons are all that one cook can properly prepare a dinner for, and three waiters will be amply employed in waiting upon that number. If more are invited the attempt to make the conversation general had better not be made, but the guests allowed to converse _tete-a-tete_.

7 Wine should be handed by the waiters after soup. To decline wine by covering the mouth of the wine-glass with the hand is an ill- bred gesture. Say simply "Not any, thank you," and the waiter will not fill your glass.

8 Fish follows next in order. A slice, neatly _cut_, not hashed up by bad carving, should be placed upon each plate, with a slice of egg, and fish sauce. If there be a silver knife, use it to cut the fish. If not, take your fork in your right hand and supply the place of the knife by a small piece of bread, which you should cut off, and when your fish is eaten, leave upon your plate.

9 Do not eat as if you had good fare for the first time in your life--that is to say, do not eat ravenously, and do not eat in a noticeable way.

10 Never smack the lips when eating. Never take a long, deep breath after you finish eating, as if the exercise had fatigued you.

11 Never make noises in your mouth or throat.

12 Never suck your teeth, or pass your tongue round the outside of your gums.

13 Never, even with cheese, put your knife into your mouth.

14 Never pick your teeth, or put your finger into your mouth.

15 If you find you have a fish-bone in your mouth, cover your lips with a napkin to remove it. It is better to be very careful to remove all bones before putting fish into your mouth. On no account spit the bones out upon your plate.

The main idea of this passage could be summarized in which sentence?

A)

Knowing how to eat helps avoid ignorance and makes you a pleasant guest.

B)

Follow the rules of etiquette when giving or attending a dinner party.

C)

Fish is a difficult item to serve and eat when dining out or at home.

D)

Waiters are servants and should be treated accordingly at all times.

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