Anonymous wrote:It depends who I am talking to. I moved to DC in 1991.I usually say the District, but sometimes I say the DMV . Depends on the circumstances.
It is definitely a newer term.
Anonymous wrote:It depends who I am talking to. I moved to DC in 1991. I usually say the District, but sometimes I say the DMV. Depends on the circumstances.
It is definitely a newer term.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know it from sports talk (radio, high school recruits who "are from the DMV") mostly.
--Bethesda resident.
Shows hosted by radio people who came here from someplace else, in other words.![]()
Says the person who lives in Bethesda.
It’s a term that originated in hip hop and go go and has been prevalent since at least 2000.
If radio hosts use it, it’s because they may more attention to local culture than you do in whatever god forsaken HOA hellhole in Nova where you’ve built your cocoon.
Anonymous wrote:Nothing screams “new to the area, living in the burbs and desperately insecure about my nouveau richeness and latent racism” than insisting that a term derived from local African American culture is something made up by people who are not from here.
Learn something about your community before speaking on it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
that's probably why some people don't like it. I find some of the DMV area (ahem) a bit classist, with the new "new money vs old money" attitude.
OTH, I cringe when I hear people call CA "Cali", or SF as "San Fran". I'm originally from there. So, I guess I'm a bit of a snob about labels, too.
This. DMV doesn’t bother me at all. Lived here for 30 years. Don’t really say it much but will type it here. Grew up in San Francisco and despise “Frisco” and “Cali.” Those are terrible and would never be uttered by someone from San Francisco (aka The City).
Anonymous wrote:Wut.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, check your racism OP.
Because DMV is frequently used in the black community, I guess that makes it “cringey” for you.
No it’s not. “DMV” is a term used by transplants who come here from somewhere else. Natives don’t use it because we’ve always said “DC metro” or “metro area” or just DC. “DMV” is not l a black thing. It’s a non-native thing.
Stop trying to find stuff to get offended about, Susan. Focus on reckoning with your own abundant racism.
Anonymous wrote: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.
that's probably why some people don't like it. I find some of the DMV area (ahem) a bit classist, with the new "new money vs old money" attitude.
OTH, I cringe when I hear people call CA "Cali", or SF as "San Fran". I'm originally from there. So, I guess I'm a bit of a snob about labels, too.
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 know it from sports talk (radio, high school recruits who "are from the DMV") mostly.
--Bethesda resident.
Shows hosted by radio people who came here from someplace else, in other words.![]()