Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC and PG county have similar accents. I heard the DC dialect recently and can report it is alive and well.
Northern VA is nowhere near those.
Ah, it was just a crude racial comment. It all makes sense now.
No, it was an additional response stemming from a question of how to identify DC residents inside of a store. Their dialect is distinctly DC and yes, many people who live in PG county are from DC originally so they have the same/similar accents and dialect.
There was no value assessment of the dialect, either positive or negative. Now whatever crude racial assignment you put on that statement is yours to own.
Bullcrap. You just don't like being called out on it and are being defensive.
Ted Lerner was the last public figure that had our regional accent. It pretty much died out due to the massive growth of the federal government from WW2-Vietnam. The Silent Generation people I knew that were native to Arlington, MoCo and DC all had the same accent. The Gen X natives I grew up with from Arlington, Fairfax, DC, Moco and PG all have the same, now different, accent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC and PG county have similar accents. I heard the DC dialect recently and can report it is alive and well.
Northern VA is nowhere near those.
Ah, it was just a crude racial comment. It all makes sense now.
No, it was an additional response stemming from a question of how to identify DC residents inside of a store. Their dialect is distinctly DC and yes, many people who live in PG county are from DC originally so they have the same/similar accents and dialect.
There was no value assessment of the dialect, either positive or negative. Now whatever crude racial assignment you put on that statement is yours to own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC and PG county have similar accents. I heard the DC dialect recently and can report it is alive and well.
Northern VA is nowhere near those.
Ah, it was just a crude racial comment. It all makes sense now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised by how many DC license plates I see at Tysons. There is shopping in DC. They can take the metro to Pentagon City. And yet still so many DC residents decide to drive all the way out to Tysons to shop.
DC residents are everywhere in VA malls and grocery stores. They are so annoying with their nasty attitudes.
How can you tell we're from DC? Our cars are outside but our attitudes are inside?
Yes. Easily identified by the attitude, dialect and clothing.
??Dialect?? Is this code for something?
No. It says exactly what is meant.
Please explain the differences in dialect between DC and Northern Virginia, lol.
Is this a serious question?
Maybe some of the differences in accents has faded a bit in the last decade, but no one disputes that there are distinctive Maryland, DC and VA accents.
And Northern Virginia, Montgomery and PG all have the same DC regional accent. Baltimore and Southern Virginia are different regions. The old DC area accent is mostly gone though.
Anonymous wrote:DC and PG county have similar accents. I heard the DC dialect recently and can report it is alive and well.
Northern VA is nowhere near those.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised by how many DC license plates I see at Tysons. There is shopping in DC. They can take the metro to Pentagon City. And yet still so many DC residents decide to drive all the way out to Tysons to shop.
DC residents are everywhere in VA malls and grocery stores. They are so annoying with their nasty attitudes.
How can you tell we're from DC? Our cars are outside but our attitudes are inside?
Yes. Easily identified by the attitude, dialect and clothing.
??Dialect?? Is this code for something?
No. It says exactly what is meant.
Please explain the differences in dialect between DC and Northern Virginia, lol.
Is this a serious question?
Maybe some of the differences in accents has faded a bit in the last decade, but no one disputes that there are distinctive Maryland, DC and VA accents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised by how many DC license plates I see at Tysons. There is shopping in DC. They can take the metro to Pentagon City. And yet still so many DC residents decide to drive all the way out to Tysons to shop.
DC residents are everywhere in VA malls and grocery stores. They are so annoying with their nasty attitudes.
How can you tell we're from DC? Our cars are outside but our attitudes are inside?
Yes. Easily identified by the attitude, dialect and clothing.
??Dialect?? Is this code for something?
No. It says exactly what is meant.
Please explain the differences in dialect between DC and Northern Virginia, lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised by how many DC license plates I see at Tysons. There is shopping in DC. They can take the metro to Pentagon City. And yet still so many DC residents decide to drive all the way out to Tysons to shop.
DC residents are everywhere in VA malls and grocery stores. They are so annoying with their nasty attitudes.
How can you tell we're from DC? Our cars are outside but our attitudes are inside?
Yes. Easily identified by the attitude, dialect and clothing.
??Dialect?? Is this code for something?
No. It says exactly what is meant.
Please explain the differences in dialect between DC and Northern Virginia, lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised by how many DC license plates I see at Tysons. There is shopping in DC. They can take the metro to Pentagon City. And yet still so many DC residents decide to drive all the way out to Tysons to shop.
DC residents are everywhere in VA malls and grocery stores. They are so annoying with their nasty attitudes.
How can you tell we're from DC? Our cars are outside but our attitudes are inside?
Yes. Easily identified by the attitude, dialect and clothing.
??Dialect?? Is this code for something?
No. It says exactly what is meant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised by how many DC license plates I see at Tysons. There is shopping in DC. They can take the metro to Pentagon City. And yet still so many DC residents decide to drive all the way out to Tysons to shop.
DC residents are everywhere in VA malls and grocery stores. They are so annoying with their nasty attitudes.
How can you tell we're from DC? Our cars are outside but our attitudes are inside?
Yes. Easily identified by the attitude, dialect and clothing.
??Dialect?? Is this code for something?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised by how many DC license plates I see at Tysons. There is shopping in DC. They can take the metro to Pentagon City. And yet still so many DC residents decide to drive all the way out to Tysons to shop.
DC residents are everywhere in VA malls and grocery stores. They are so annoying with their nasty attitudes.
How can you tell we're from DC? Our cars are outside but our attitudes are inside?
Yes. Easily identified by the attitude, dialect and clothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The people who think the economy is bad aren’t at Tyson’s and they probably don’t even live in the immediate area unless they are in the low income apartments.
They’re buying things off Temu while complaining about Chinese people