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And here in Northern Virginia they dont' have accents at all. Not northern or southern. I think this comes from being such a transient city. Look at Baltimore they're just 40 miles up the road and they have accents. However again I would say younger folks in my limited experience have shed the Baltimore accents. I think this all makes the area unique. It's not super northern like Philly and NYC. Yet it certainly isn't southern by any stretch of the imagination. It's just here. You know? Not neccesarily a bad thing. |
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I just assume we "Yankees" are part of the great reconstruction of the South and have migrated this far, but as you go too far South, the mosquitoes and the roaches get bigger and air gets thicker and it keeps us out! Hehe. Very American down here in VA Beach too. Not too much sectionalism.
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Funny is VB is 'southern' yet I know few natives. Very few.
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The people I know who complain about North Carolina not being "Southern enough" already think so (probably worth noting that most of them are from California, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, or abroad...)
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I am a "yankee" transplant living in NOVA. While I don't get a southern feeling here, I definately did in Richmond when I saw the huge Robert E. Lee statue on Monument avenue placed with his back to the north. (deliberately placed that way according to the tour guide)
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Apparantly, there isn't any known significance for the position of statues on Monument Ave. I lived in the Richmond area for most of my life. I did hear the rumors of Lee facing with back to the north being deliberate--quite possible. As for VA being part of the south. I agree it is South of the Mason-Dixon line therefore, southern by those standards. Outside the Northern VA area, which is transient, and Richmond, which is becoming quite transient, I believe the majority of VA to be "southern"--to me (and I think this topic is highly based on opinion) there are many areas that are more small-town, maybe even considered more hospitable and living a bit in the slow lane--even holding onto the Civil War as a part of their identity. If you've ever visited south-west Virginia, Blue Ridge Mt. Area, areas west of Richmond and East of Norfolk/Va Beach, and anything South of Richmond--it's pretty Southern. The Civil War History runs deep in VA--Appomattox is proof of that. Also, moving from MD to Richmond as a child--I thought it was very Southern, as the majority of children were required by their families to attend Cotillion (you know-manners/etiquette/formal dance lessons)--and that was when I attended public school. And even though it was twenty+ years ago, I found the children to have thick accents. When I went to Private School, I met the families that live on the James River in VA and belong to the VA Country Club--that is OLD money (prestigious southerners)--that's when I met John Hancock's direct descendants. So, yes, I'd call VA "the south". |
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