Anonymous wrote:Neither. I'm from California.![]()
Now, my kids say they're from DC when they meet someone from outside of the area, because nobody outside of the DMV knows the names of the various suburbs. Most Americans actually do know what and where "DC" is.
Anonymous wrote:DC if we’re traveling. The actual suburb name if we’re nearby. It’s about simplicity.
Anonymous wrote:12:38, this is why context matters. If someone’s making conversation about where you live now, you give the current answer. We were on vacation and often got asked “where are you all here from” or some other similar question. That’s different from someone asking where you grew up. For some of us, that’s an easy answer. For others it’s much more complicated.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe it's a black thing, but I've never told another black person that I was from DC and had them ask me to clarify. DC, Atlanta, Chicago...we seem to know exactly where our "safe havens" are. For the longest time, people would respond with "Chocolate City?" I don't think I've ever said "Washington DC" unless it was someone from another country.
Anonymous wrote:Around here, Arlington. East Coast I say DC. Anywhere else in the US I say Washington DC metro area. Outside the country - the US, near the capital.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Washington, DC. People away from here don't know what "DC" is.
They don’t know DC is the nations capital?
No. they know Washington DC is the nations capital though.
Then they need to open a book, map, tv, etc. I get if someone doesn’t know Maryland but not DC.
NP. Believe it or not, the capital and the average people who live there are a long way away from the minds of most people here on the West Coast. There are other possible meanings that are more likely over here.
So again, open a book, map, tv, etc. No one is saying to care about the ppl but you should know the nations capital at the very least. I’ve visited the West Coast and so far haven’t encountered an idiot who doesn’t know what and where DC is.
Of course we know where "Washington, DC" is, and what the capital city of the country is. That wasn't the issue we're discussing, genius. The issue is whether people in the rest of the country think that "DC" means one and can only mean one thing in this country, which is obviously not true.
There's honestly something really wrong with you to keep being in denial that you aren't the center of the universe. Maybe narcissism.
Anonymous wrote:Warshington.