Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People talk like that in Maryland.
I am 50 l, have spent all those years in Maryland except for college, and no. No, they do not.
Samesies
Anonymous wrote:I've never heard anyone say either of these.
Anonymous wrote:We used to say "cruising the drag" in my small hometown. It meant driving up and down the same route through the center of town to see everyone else driving. Kind of Dazed and Confused style.
In Holyoke, there is a tradition that dates back to the early 1920s, "walking the drag." Residents would don their best clothes and walk down Northampton to Mountain Park for the first day of the amusement park's season.
With the closing of the park, the route changed from a walk from the corner of Cherry and Northampton streets to the intersection with Shawmut Avenue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People talk like that in Maryland.
I am 50 l, have spent all those years in Maryland except for college, and no. No, they do not.
Anonymous wrote:OP, what was the context in which you heard those phrases?
I’ve never heard them either, from the northeast. I’ve never heard them in an old movie or tv show, either.
Anonymous wrote:When I was first learning English those phrases would throw me off because it did not make any sense to me at all.
What is the origin of those phrases?
As a non native English speaker the word "strip" makes more sense to me than "drag"