Right??Anonymous wrote:
Stupid language evolving without my explicit permission!
Exactly.Anonymous wrote:I like the term and don’t think it’s low class.
Very strange that so many of you think “dmv” is a low class term and others say the term came from the black community.
Put those two together, and this whole thread is concerning.
Anonymous wrote:For some reason, I find the term "DMV" extremely cringy. It feels like it's for the kind of people that listen to those mindless Top 40 radio station shows in the morning.
No one in a nice part of DC, Bethesda, Chevy Chase, or Arlington would use this term, would they?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with you. I grew up in NW and Chevy Chase. Now live in Arlington. No one I know calls it DMV. That’s a term for people who have to sit in tons of traffic to commute to work.
You are insufferable. I didn’t realize that people like you really exist outside of movie satires.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with you. I grew up in NW and Chevy Chase. Now live in Arlington. No one I know calls it DMV. That’s a term for people who have to sit in tons of traffic to commute to work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For some reason, I find the term "DMV" extremely cringy. It feels like it's for the kind of people that listen to those mindless Top 40 radio station shows in the morning.
No one in a nice part of DC, Bethesda, Chevy Chase, or Arlington would use this term, would they?
No but someone who constantly asks about class (and working class? this is not England) is definitely class insecure and not in the ranks if you know what I mean.
Anonymous wrote:For some reason, I find the term "DMV" extremely cringy. It feels like it's for the kind of people that listen to those mindless Top 40 radio station shows in the morning.
No one in a nice part of DC, Bethesda, Chevy Chase, or Arlington would use this term, would they?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody used DMV when I lived there 1991-1998.
I had to be convinced it was a real thing and this board has gotten me to write it. It's convenient but does sound a bit tacky.
It’s a new term