Anonymous wrote:The DC accent is a black DC accent. There is no white DC accent for the most part.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is hard for me to describe but I think there is a distinct accent. It's pretty close to the Maryland/Baltimore one, a weird mix of NJ and Southern. Who else would pronounce Bowie the way we do?
Exactly. Some of the local news guys talk this way. The way Marylanders say “on” is pretty unique I’d say.
Sounds like “ohwn”
Sen Pat Buchanan is a great example of a Washingtonian accent. Even the way he said his name, Paaat Byuu cahhhnnen.
Long A’s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is hard for me to describe but I think there is a distinct accent. It's pretty close to the Maryland/Baltimore one, a weird mix of NJ and Southern. Who else would pronounce Bowie the way we do?
Exactly. Some of the local news guys talk this way. The way Marylanders say “on” is pretty unique I’d say.
Anonymous wrote:It is hard for me to describe but I think there is a distinct accent. It's pretty close to the Maryland/Baltimore one, a weird mix of NJ and Southern. Who else would pronounce Bowie the way we do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Murland is definitely part of a Maryland accent and not a Washington accent. It's part of Balmer Murland.
As for WaRshington, that is further west. I've heard many people from the PA-OH-WV tri-state area say that, namely near Warshington, PA (I grew up in Pittsburgh). I think it drifted this way from out there as it is far more common there than here.
ITA with this. I grew up in Alexandria. I had plenty of friends who say "Warshington," but they invariably had family origins in PA, OH and NJ.