Anonymous wrote:Philadelphians are very proud of their city. Do not call it Philly!
Do you know the city well? You might check out the incredible museums there. The historic parts of the city are gorgeous and there are cool little towns adjacent as well.
Anonymous wrote:If you had one of those crop-duster airplanes, and filled it with rust remover, and flew over Philadelphia and sprayed it, I’m fairly certain the entire city would just disappear.
Anonymous wrote:I’m from north Wilmington and my parents grew up in blue collar Philly neighborhoods (they always called it Philly, not sure why that is a no-no).
As noted above, wooder=water and quooder=quarter. There is also a weird long “o” in home or throne (or just the word Oh) - not sure how to type it, but it’s like “heooome”. We drop words. For instance, “I’m done my soup” is perfectly acceptable, whereas uptight DMV types insist on extra words I.e. “I’m done with my soup.” All of my relatives are far more direct than people typically are in the DMV. I get told a lot that I am “very genuine” - by which I suspect people here mean rude or blunt.
Tastykakes are the best! Wawa is the best!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have a sense of what actual towns they live in?
That’s right start judging them for living in Ridley township vs being classy enough to own a half a waterfront twin in ridley park.
I'm surprised there are no Irish people in the mix and I'm wondering what's up? And Ridley culture is gonna be a wee different than Bryn Mawr.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Kelly Drive was not named after Grace Kelly, it was named after her brother.
Elaborate!
Anonymous wrote:The Kelly Drive was not named after Grace Kelly, it was named after her brother.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have a sense of what actual towns they live in?
That’s right start judging them for living in Ridley township vs being classy enough to own a half a waterfront twin in ridley park.
Anonymous wrote:Do you have a sense of what actual towns they live in?
Anonymous wrote:I’m from south Jersey - went to Penn. Yes - a lot of Italians moved from south Philly to our south Jersey town.
Occasionally I let a “wooder” slip instead of water and my kids are like - what ?!
People who live in Philadelphia seem less uptight than those in DC and NYC. Are the people you’re working with transplants though?