Anonymous wrote:Saying they live in North Potomac. Or North Bethesda.
Anonymous wrote:Mentioning an Ivy League education they've acquired but in a veiled way (I went to school in Cambridge)
Complaining about maintenance for a yacht or plane. (Or in one conversation I was in, both.)
Bemoaning how little they use their second home. (Or third. Or fourth.)
Name dropping people of wealth or power even though it doesn't really contribute to their point or the conversation.
Complaining how long house renovations are taking because the custom marble from Italy was delayed.
Mentioning how much they are inconvenienced by something when in actuality, someone who works/reports to them is the one really bearing the brunt. (And we all know it.)
Anonymous wrote:I don't watch television.
Anonymous wrote:"I spoke to Mother yesterday" -- said to someone who is not your sibling.
"I went to school in Boston" -- hoping for the listener to ask. "Oh yeah, which one?"
"Cinema"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I learned here that saying 'Brava' to a female is pretentious. I'm ok with that- at least I'm not ignorant and uneducated.
An American friend once informed me that it would be seen as pretentious in America to put beverages or condiments in non labeled crystal or stoneware instead of utilizing original containers. This seemed like something a cave dweller would do- we just never had labels on the table while growing up.
I must have an arsenal of pretension as I am British as well.
Not pretentious. Just unnecessary dirty dishes. But if you're washing the dishes, then I don't care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have never heard anyone call it anything other than a credenza. The facilities people where I work call it a credenza. There is nothing pretentious about it.
The office supply people seem to have taken over the word "credenza" to mean "file cabinet with wood or melamine instead of metal." Not to be confused with "cadenza" which is a little musical interlude. My favorite is when furniture companies try to sell you a "bedroom suit."
So while "credenza" might have worked in your grandparents' day for the thing in your dining room that you store the silver and placemats in, it's now a sideboard.
Anonymous wrote:I have never heard anyone call it anything other than a credenza. The facilities people where I work call it a credenza. There is nothing pretentious about it.