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  1. #1
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    Inquiring Minds Want to Know...

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    Does John McCain TRY to say "warshington" and sometimes slip up and say "washington"? Or is it the other way around??? He's been surprisingly inconsistent tonight.

    I actually think "warshington" is kind of endearing.

  2. #2
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    Warshington is the pronounciation where I grew up. So I was kinda surprised when I moved to DC and realized it is what locals here say. Not that many folks are born and bred here Lots of us 'imports'. But I've heard it from quite a few folks that I know who are from several generations of DCers.

    I'd never really noticed McCain but now you have me interested. I'll pay better attention. Anything is better than nucular.
    You too can help me fight cancer, and get a lovely cookbook for your very own! My team's cookbook is for sale Click here to order. Proceeds go to our team's fundraising for the Philly Livestrong Challenge!

  3. #3
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    I'm a hick. I've always said it with the "R". My X used to ALWAYS correct me as if he was Mr.Webster himself!

    I digress....now that I live a few miles away from the great state of Washington I hear all the locals put the "r" in it, so there!

    Mr. McCain can say whatever he wants however he wants to say it.........I am so not listening!
    Life is like a 10 speed bike, we all have gears we never use.
    Charles Schultz

    "The bicycle is just as good company as most husbands and, when it gets old and shabby, a woman can dispose of it and get a new one without shocking the entire community."Ann Strong, Minneapolis Tribune, 1895

  4. #4
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    I am not saying anything *directly* in response to bikerchic because I responded with some perfectly innocent indiscretion to a post about John Kerry last night and that thread was gone this morning.

    But... we're probably on the same page. I just have this strange feeling of civic responsibility to watch both conventions, as well as debates, etc...

    His peeps should have made him wear a red tie tonight. Not only would it have been thematically appropriate, but it would have made him seem more virile and less old.
    Last edited by VeloVT; 09-04-2008 at 08:49 PM.

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by liza View Post
    I am not saying anything *directly* in response to bikerchic because I responded with some perfectly innocent indiscretion to a post about John Kerry last night and that thread was gone this morning. .
    Yeah, I deleted my thread. I asked for no politics, it went there, so I nuked it.

  6. #6
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    I was pretty impressed with his regal and ladylike 96 year old mom, though.

    He has a nice smile, too. That alone will probably earn more votes than you would like to think.
    Last edited by VeloVT; 09-04-2008 at 09:36 PM.

  7. #7
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    Growing up here in Washington State, I've always heard "washington."

    I find it amusing that WA originally wanted to name itself "Columbia" (after the river) but was afraid it would be too easily confused with District of Columbia, so opted for "Washington" as more distinct.

    Little did they know....
    "If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by liza View Post
    Does John McCain TRY to say "warshington" and sometimes slip up and say "washington"? Or is it the other way around??? He's been surprisingly inconsistent tonight.

    I actually think "warshington" is kind of endearing.
    I just realized...he found the "R" that Bostonians lost when they "pawk the ca' in havad yad"

    In Southern Indiana, the errant "R" in waRsh and waRshington is common (along with poor subject/verb tense)
    Last edited by Mr. Bloom; 09-05-2008 at 03:29 AM.
    If you don't grow where you're planted, you'll never BLOOM - Will Rogers

  9. #9
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    Feb 2005
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    I have never heard the "r" in Washington or wash except from people who were from Illinois or Indiana. A lot of them live around Phoenix, so it was pretty common there.
    I worked really hard to get rid of my Boston accent, but once, when I went on a job interview when I graduated from college, I walked in, shook the guy's hand, and he looked at me and said, "Cape Cod."
    Huh? He then said, "Are you from New England.?"
    I always pronounce my r's, unless I am really yelling and angry. In fact, you rarely hear anyone with the accent around where I live. It seems to live on in certain towns and cities, maybe where people don't move in or out as much.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Crankin View Post
    I have never heard the "r" in Washington or wash except from people who were from Illinois or Indiana. A lot of them live around Phoenix, so it was pretty common there.
    I worked really hard to get rid of my Boston accent, but once, when I went on a job interview when I graduated from college, I walked in, shook the guy's hand, and he looked at me and said, "Cape Cod."
    Huh? He then said, "Are you from New England.?"
    I always pronounce my r's, unless I am really yelling and angry. In fact, you rarely hear anyone with the accent around where I live. It seems to live on in certain towns and cities, maybe where people don't move in or out as much.
    I'm from the Cape and my accent (after MUCH effort) is pure Midwestern these days...except after I've had a few drinks. It cracks my friends up.

    Electra Townie 7D

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pax View Post
    It cracks my friends up.
    You should hear the New Jersey rush back into DH's speech whenever he goes home and goes out with his "boys" - all 'a dose t'ings...

    My grandmother put an "R" in just about everything, but "warsh" was high on the list. She lived in New Jersey most of her adult life, but I think her descent was Southern

    I, of course, have no accent whatever
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

  12. #12
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    Question: why would anyone want to get rid of an accent? I think regional differences, international differences are great. It shows you have a history, been somewhere, done things ....

    I have no accent at all.
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  13. #13
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    Trek,
    I used to have a NJ accent, moved to Idaho when I was 18.
    2 years later, speaking to a step sister, I actually blushed at her accent. She sounded so ... well, Jersey gal. My accent had diminished on its own already; which is why her nasal NJ vowels horrified me so much, they were shocking. So, why would a person want to lose their accent? because it sounded pretty uneducated to me at the time.

    I didn't want to sound like THAT.

    Now I pride myself with the few vestiges of my accent;
    the ability to pronounce Mary Merry and Marry like the 3 different words that they are.


    And there is no R in washington. If you're not from Ohio, why would you put one into Washington?
    Mimi Team TE BIANCHISTA
    for six tanks of gas you could have bought a bike.

  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by Trek420 View Post
    Question: why would anyone want to get rid of an accent? I think regional differences, international differences are great. It shows you have a history, been somewhere, done things ....

    I have no accent at all.
    We were a military family and my folks didn't want us to be teased mercilessly all through school. I don't mind my old accent but it's nice not to have people comment about it constantly.

    Electra Townie 7D

  15. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by Trek420 View Post
    Question: why would anyone want to get rid of an accent?
    My husband grew up in the deep south and spent 7 years in the air force trying to lose his accent. He hated it. Now it's very faint. BUT, when he turns it on (which he can do at the drop of a hat), it freaks me out. He sounds so backwoods/unworldly/uneducated and frankly...scary. It's not the charming southern gentleman accent at all.

    I knew a lot of people in Pennsylvania that said wash with the 'r'. I can't say whether or not they were natives, but it was very, very prevelant there.
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