DEAR MISS MANNERS: Could you please define what "Ladies' Equivalent" means when men's dress is "Coat and Tie"? Also, please feel free to set out the basic rules on ladies' equivalent dress for other dress-code situations as well.
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I have no idea what is expected of me, and judging from the attire of other women who attend similar functions, neither do they (styles range from very dressy to extremely casual). I would very much like to be appropriately attired in these situations.
GENTLE READER: It means that your hosts refuse to be caught arguing with the ladies about what is currently considered proper dress. What with rapidly changing fashions and easily aroused sensitivities, not to mention regional and social variations, you'd have to be a fool to issue a more precise dress code to ladies.
Fortunately, the gentlemen are more or less stable, so we used their clothes as a standard. (This is why Miss Manners shudders when she hears about gentlemen wanting "more creativity" in their wardrobes.)
"Coat and tie" is the basic level of formality for either day or evening, when neither sports clothes nor dinner jackets are worn. For ladies, the equivalent would be either a dress or a dressy suit, whether with skirt or trousers.
Uh-oh. Miss Manners has just done something very foolish.
DEAR MISS MANNERS: After working at the same job for 32 years, I am retiring. My wife and I had our son and daughter-in-law over for dinner, and told them of the decision to retire and move to another state.
I expected some kind of cordial congratulations. They might have expressed some gratitude for my faithfulness to that job, the pay from which supported my son for two decades, educated him, enabled me to give them a monetary gift to start their married life, etc. They might have celebrated with me the fact that I won't have to work there anymore. They could have at least offered us good wishes on our move and on our new life afterward.
Instead, they listened in stony silence. Minutes later my daughter-in-law bestirred herself to say, "We're staying here" (no one expected otherwise) and "We're going have to find another baby-sitter." My son added, "We expected this" and (because he drops by uninvited for lunch most days), "Where am I going to eat lunch?" Their only reaction, when it finally came, was completely self-centered.
We thought we raised him right, and that we had a good relationship with them, but we are appalled by this. It strikes me as the rudest thing I have ever experienced. And it hurts. I have since told friends of this decision, and they reacted as I expected.
Are my expectations out of line? Should I say something to my son and daughter-in-law about their rudeness? Or should I simply conclude that they have somehow acquired the social graces of a gorilla, and get used to it?
GENTLE READER: Please don't go away mad. Yes, they were rude, and the possibility that their sullenness reflects how upset they are that you are moving is no excuse.
But you say you brought your son up right, and indeed, callous children don't spend their lunch hours visiting their parents. Miss Manners suggests one last etiquette lesson before you go.
But not from you. The technique of complaining about how one was treated is unsatisfactory even when successful, as the apologies and reforms have been pre-ordered. Fortunately, you have your wife to take them aside and confide that you were hurt by their reaction. This enables you to be pleasantly surprised when they make it up to you.
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