| Really rude. I would say something if he's expecting you to pay. That's telling of how he was raised and I'd worry if he didn't make a fortune they'd always be broke. My know one meal and if you are out and someone is paying always go cheaper. |
| For the food, he's a young man and probably eats a lot, much more than a young woman. It is rude to order dessert if no one else does. |
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College aged boys eat a lot. A LOT. They are like a human garbage pail.
Do you want him to order enough to satisfy himself or do you want him to order as little as you and be hungry? Or do you want him to offer to pay for his share? You could always ... just not order in when he's around. Go ahead, be stingy. |
| Young people in general have crappy manners, and no one ever has the balls to correct them (because we have good manners), so it continues..... |
The bolted is your way forward, if you're actually looking for a solution. Which I doubt; this is so petty that you clearly just wanted to vent. |
| I think it’s rude to always have the most expensive order. But my answer is somewhat modified by whether he’s just at your house for a meal or whether he’s staying there. If he’s staying there, then he needs to order what he needs to satiate his appetite. And that amount is not unusual for a guy that age. But if he’s just coming by for dinner, I would expect him to have a heavy afternoon snack or late night snack (like a PP suggested—guys this age are keeping fast food restaurants in business by ordering second dinners in their way to/from places). If he’s coming for dinner, that’s one dinner. If he needs essentially two dinners, it’s rude to expect you to supply both. |
Np this seems more something a kid from a lower class family would do. At least that’s what I’ve seen. Rich kids have always had excellent manners I will say that it’s awkward being a guest and wanting more. You offer to pay but the hosts don’t let you. |
| He's a young man, he's hungry. Don't invite people if you are gonna be cheap. |
Then, he can eat at home. His parents failed to teach him manners. You don't order more than a meal or what your host orders. |
| Teen boys usually have a big appetite. If money is a problem, you should order yourself, you don't have to ask what he wants. |
He’s a college age boy, right? This is what I’d expect. We kinda order an extra pizza just for DS. |
+1 This. |
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If you order takeout a lot, he must assume you don’t care about the money.
Why have you not solved this by ordering cheaper, and/or cooking instead of ordering out so frequently? |
This. |
+1 and if this were a Miss Manners column, I’m not sure whether the gluttonous kid (Lenny!) or the shockingly cheap, dreadfully judgmental, host would come in for more scorn. If you a begrudging someone an extra Chick-fil-A meal and are not desperately poor, you are an embarrassingly ungenerous person. At least the boyfriend is young and has time to learn better manners. |