Anonymous wrote:Yes it's often used by people from the hood
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?
Working class people are somehow cringe? Bless your heart.
Anonymous wrote:What’s wrong with people who listen to radio? I am not sure I get this question, I live in McLean and couldn’t care less how others refer to this area. Also, a lot of crooks and cringey people live in Chevy Chase, Bethesda, McLean, Arlington etc.. Ask me how I knowu…
Oh, and I lived in Brookland in the late 80’s before it was gentrified.Anonymous wrote:When I moved here in 1987, NCA (National Capital Area) was the term I heard more often. At some point it changed to DMV, it took me a while since, like others, I thought of it as Dept of Motor Vehicles.
Anonymous wrote:It's not low class but it is a relatively new term that had not been used before 10-15 years ago or so.
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?
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.