Every time I touched it, my hand, sleeve or serviette stuck to it like glue.
From the expressandstar.com
Sharp obligingly wrote out the poem and his address on a serviette and gave it to his new acquaintance.
From the en.wikipedia.org
If you leave the table, put the serviette on your chair.
From the au.news.yahoo.com
At this point Duckworth does what I secretly hoped he would, scrawling his refined logic on the back of a serviette.
From the telegraph.co.uk
Bill wipes his moustache with a serviette.
From the guardian.co.uk
Oh, and never call it a serviette.
From the au.news.yahoo.com
At lunch, no sooner have I popped up from my table to grab a serviette when a hungry cockatoo swoops in for a pick at the remains.
From the couriermail.com.au
When Piaget left Berkeley, he had his serviette, the small Swissair bag, and a third, larger bag crammed with botanical specimens.
From the en.wikipedia.org
It oozes nostalgia with its hot pink and turquoise decor, antique Route 66 signs, jukebox playing golden oldies and retro serviette dispensers on the tables.
From the theaustralian.com.au
More examples
Napkin: a small piece of table linen that is used to wipe the mouth and to cover the lap in order to protect clothing
A napkin, or face towel (also in Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia and South Africa: serviette) is a rectangle of cloth or tissue paper used at the table for wiping the mouth while eating. It is usually small and folded. ...
A table napkin, especially a paper one
A paper napkin. Not slang, simply 'napkin' in French.
N. 1. Napkin, usually made of paper. You may be greeted with some raised eyebrows if you ask for a napkin in a British restaurant. They may understand you to mean a sanitary towel or a nappy.
A table napkin (common in British English and Australian English)
Table napkins. Cloth used before tissues were invented. There were special rings to stow the cloth in, either woven cane or metal.