Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are no small towns right outside of Washington D.C. They're all large suburbs, Leesburg included. And as someone correctly pointed out, Leesburg and other areas near there are not "right outside of."
Technically Town of Kensington is right outside of DC. And it probably meets most definitions of “small town” unless you really mean rural.
I grew up in a “small town” in Jersey population 10,000. But it didn’t feel like it because it was part of the metro NYC area. Except for schools which there are by town so I went to school with mostly the same kids from K-12. In my high school class of 200 I didn’t know 5 kids (I counted at graduation 😂).
All that to say the definition of small town is both technical (population, government structure) and subjective (area, distance from city, feeling, etc.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Purcellville, Leesburg, Frederick, Fredericksburg, Owings Mills, Lorton, etc.
Those are not "right outside of"
They are if you're talking to someone from Des Moines.
Anonymous wrote:AU Park.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Leesburg? Frederick? I don't consider any of the close-in cities like Arlington or Takoma Park small towns, and I don't know anyone who would.
Arlington isn't a city. It's a county.
Alexandria is a city.
Neither are "towns."
I think you're being a bit pedantic here. Someone is having a conversation, not a geography quiz.
Not really. "Town" has a specific meaning. And it isn't synonymous with "city" or "county." Although a town can be a locality within a county. But not a city. A city has a specific destination.
Is Fairfax City a town or a city? What about Leesburg? People here call it a town, but it has twice the population of Fairfax
Fairfax is a city.
Leesburg is a town.
The classification is not population-based. Did you really not understand that? It has to do with incorporation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Old Town Alexandria.
That would be ridiculous. Alexandria is the 3rd most populous city in the DC area.
Anonymous wrote:There are no small towns right outside of Washington D.C. They're all large suburbs, Leesburg included. And as someone correctly pointed out, Leesburg and other areas near there are not "right outside of."
Anonymous wrote:OP have you been watching Southern Charm haha? One of the cast members this season says this exact statement and follows up with “called Great Falls”.
Anonymous wrote:Where do you assume this person is from? What is the first town that comes to mind?
Anonymous wrote:Depends on who I'm talking to.
I live in a small town about 1.5 hours from DC metro. If I'm in Virginia, I say the name of the town. If I'm in a different part of the US, I say I'm from Virginia. If asked what part, I say the central part.
If I'm traveling internationally, we say we're from the US. If pressed further, we say a small town outside of Washington DC (because that's a recognizable city to the global audience).
Anonymous wrote:Lots of options, and people have different definitions of "small" and "right outside" so if someone said that, I would explain I'm from the DC area, and what town is it?
Anonymous wrote:There are no small towns right outside of Washington D.C. They're all large suburbs, Leesburg included. And as someone correctly pointed out, Leesburg and other areas near there are not "right outside of."