Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is a "moderate" Hispanic? I assume anyone in the US speaks at least rudimentary English.
Obviously you know what I meant but this is a forum hardly anyone takes serious not an English class from college.
I actually don't know what "moderate Hispanic" means. Does it mean only 1 Hispanic parent and 1 white parent? Does it mean 2 Hispanic parents but not culturally Hispanic? You don't speak Spanish, or not well? Seriously - what does it mean?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is a "moderate" Hispanic? I assume anyone in the US speaks at least rudimentary English.
Obviously you know what I meant but this is a forum hardly anyone takes serious not an English class from college.
Anonymous wrote:If you have time and interest tonight:
https://politics-prose.com/amelia-tseng
7/7 @ 7pm Amelia Tseng — Empanadas, Pupusas, and Greens on the Side: Language and Latinidad in the Nation's Capital - with Dr. Wanda Hernández
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m Latina and this never has never happened to me once in DC.
OP is trolling.
NP.
Would you mind please using the less-offensive and correct term, Latinx?
TIA !
Stop copy pasting this. Nobody thinks you're funny. Save it for in-person convos in circles where it matters.
TIA! is the tell because it's sloppy just like thanx. It reeks of superficiality. But you knew that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would expect it to be rude to have an expectation either way - that you do speak fluent English or that you don't. As you say, plenty of people have English less clear than yours, so why should I expect based on skin color that someone is or isn't fluent?
I don’t think it’s rude to have the assumption that someone living and working in the us speaks English.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would expect it to be rude to have an expectation either way - that you do speak fluent English or that you don't. As you say, plenty of people have English less clear than yours, so why should I expect based on skin color that someone is or isn't fluent?
I don’t think it’s rude to have the assumption that someone living and working in the us speaks English.
Anonymous wrote:Wondering as a moderate Hispanic born in DC with family who has been here since 1965. I encounter way too many people who assume we don't speak English even when my English is clearer than theirs. I got annoyed at one and she said , well you never know nowadays.
Anonymous wrote:I would expect it to be rude to have an expectation either way - that you do speak fluent English or that you don't. As you say, plenty of people have English less clear than yours, so why should I expect based on skin color that someone is or isn't fluent?