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16 Table Manners You Must Teach Your Kids Yay!

16 table manners must be taught to children!

1. Prepare for the meal

Before the meal, let your child help set up the dishes, serve the food, etc. When you are ready, let your child invite the elders to eat, and remember to wash your hands before the meal.

2. Invite the elders to take their seats first and let them eat first

Respecting the elderly is a traditional Chinese virtue, so parents should do a good job of demonstrating this by inviting the elders to take their seats and giving them their meals first.

3. Encourage your children to help their family members and elders with their food

Parents can praise their children when they are finished, "Mom noticed that you're very good at taking care of others" and so on.

4. Hold chopsticks correctly

It's best to talk to your child about the origins of chopsticks and teach them to use them correctly. Our old ancestors invented chopsticks, a prop that can be used for all kinds of food, and contains the deep traditional cultural essence of responding to changes with no change and complexity with simplicity, which we must pass on.

5. Don't judge food negatively

Don't complain that the meal someone has worked so hard to prepare for you is not to your liking, and don't make any rude comments. To enjoy every meal we have with a grateful heart.

6. Standardize sitting posture

At the dinner table, make your child's body sit upright and maintain a straight posture. This not only looks good, but is also good for children's digestion.

Dining with one hand to take the bowl with one hand to take cutlery, do not look down to pick up the rice, elbows do not support on the table, legs under the table, feet as far as possible, can not be stilted, and the table to maintain a certain distance in order to facilitate the use of tableware for the best.

7. Don't bang on the chopsticks or make a lot of noise during the meal

Banging on the chopsticks and making a lot of noise is a very uneducated behavior, a sign of disrespect for others, and it will cause disgust and aversion to those who are eating at the same table.

8. Avoid rummaging around in your plate

It is not a good idea to put too much food on your plate at one time, finish what you have in your plate and then go back for more.

Don't pick your favorite dishes and turn them over in the plate, some people even pick all their favorite dishes from the plate and leave the bad ones for others, which is a very rude behavior and seems to be more selfish.

9. Eat as much as possible not to make a sound

Dining chewing slowly, meal in the mouth without talking; soup do not use the mouth to suck, in order to prevent the sound.

10. Chopsticks etiquette to remember

Don't put chopsticks in your mouth and lick chopsticks, don't hold chopsticks in your hand and look for them at the table; don't cross others to pick up food don't stick chopsticks in the rice, don't point chopsticks at others or use them in play fights; don't put back the food that was pinched out.

11. Do not do indecent behavior in public

Tell your children to cough and sneeze with one hand to cover their mouths to the side of no one, and to pick their teeth and noses with a napkin or a hand so as not to affect the appetite of the other guests present.

12. How to eat, very important

No waste of food, eat as much as much, learn to divide the food into small bites and small bites to eat, do not tear and bite, the whole piece of gnawing, eating is not barbaric, spit out of the fish splinters, bones and vegetable scraps, with chopsticks or paper towels to pick up out, can not be directly spit out onto the desktop.

13. Teach your children to use honorifics, such as please and thank you

When someone hands your child a dish, smile and say thank you. If family and friends get together for a meal during the New Year and drink, parents can encourage children to toast their elders with a drink or plain water and say something like "Happy New Year, good health".

14. Don't eat and do other things at the same time

Eating time is a time for family and friends to get together and communicate. Remind your children not to play with toys, watch TV or play with the iPad while eating, and try to keep them from leaving their seats during the meal.

Moms and dads should also set an example by not playing with their cell phones.

15. Thank the person who prepared the food after the meal

To thank the person who prepared the food is not only polite, but also a sign of gratitude.

16. What should I do after eating?

If you want to leave the table first after eating, you should greet your elders and help clear the table, clean up the dishes, or help wash the dishes.

This is also a basic etiquette. If your child has eaten first, he or she should get up and say, "I've eaten, please enjoy your meal," before leaving the table.