My fourth generation Washingtonian mother does. I do not. We are white, BTW. |
Fwiw, my cousins from Conn. think my brother, sister and I have a slight southern accent. However, a couple of them sound like they are from the Jersey Shore. I think it is their mother's Rhode Island accent peeping out. |
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Southerners (and I mean Georgia, FL, etc) think I have a NY accent. wth?
My cousins in NY say we sound like Southerners! lol |
You are a moron. So, idiot, accents and pronunciations go hand in hand, as there's a difference btw WARSHington and WASHington. ex: 12:39 - My NW born and raised DH says Warshington. |
Why do you have to call someone a moron and an idiot to get your point across? |
I thought that was the poor part of MD? |
Very on point, except I would say that what you refer to as the AA accent extends to white people as well. It's like a mumble. I'm white. When I went away to college, people asked me why I was talking to myself or mumbling and I was like I am talking to YOU, what the hell are you talking about. Then, I went home from break and heard my parents mumbling to each other and burst out laughing and thought OMG - THAT is what I sound like to other people. Example: "I'm going to" = "I munna" "what are you doing?" = "whacho doin'?" Yes, I am guilty of saying this probably every day. And I am a lawyer. |
ABSOLUTELY! |
Washington used to have an Italian neighborhood. It was torn down when they built the convention center. There are plenty of native washingtonians who are white. the "DC" accent most people are mentioning so far is actually a Maryland accent. Baltimore and the Eastern Shore have it much more pronounced than we do up here. Not only the "o" thing but the letter R is pronounced "Are-a." |
| I might add, you can tell southerners (includes D.C. for non-D.C. people) because they are not friendly. Much less friendly than other parts of the U.S. |
I'm a native and I only hear this from people from way far over the bridge, like Easton MD or something. I think it's more a MD country thing. |
Also, there's something about vowels, particularly"o". It's a soft accent. In my experience, it is a black accent, but some whites also have it. |
| I grew up saying Warshington. Had to break that habit in college. Mid 40s, white. |
| My born-and-raised DC kids, now grown, say "I'm onna" or "I munna" in stead of "I'm going to", as well as "all-most" and "ohmost", each kid differently, for almost. We're white. |
As a native Washingtonian (from DC proper) now in my 40's I am certain that this is a Maryland accent you are referring too NOT a DC accent. There is a bit of this that travels through some of the Eastern portions of DC into Maryland and up through and past Baltimore (that include the random R sounds, "uh" in place of a wuhter not water, er for the or fer not for, and long nasal sounding vowels particularly for a and o). |