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Exactly!:tup:
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Since the South is mainly defined geographically, it can literally develop any way it wants and add to its history, just like all the other regions of the country. |
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Yup, I live in New York and the accent is not common in the under 40 crowd. The only place that still has an extremely marked accent in the region is Long Island, lots of young folks from there still have a strong LI accent.
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I've always found the argument that once a state grows into this hub of liberalism it ceases to be Southern a ridiculous one.
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If it were only about geography, then there'd be no ambiguity at all: Tucson, Arizona is more Southern than Memphis, Charleston, Atlanta and Dallas; that's unarguable fact. |
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Because if it is, then a whole lot of places in the south aren't very southern, and a whole lot of places in the north aren't northern. Concepts like that don't seem as firm in the 21st century, where rural/urban and service economy/manufacturing divides seem far more prominent than geographic divisions. |
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In general I'd agree, however Virginia is a bit tougher to pin down as it's geographically part of the transitional mid-Atlantic region. In particular, because its population is skewed to the north, there's an argument to be made that it (increasingly) functions as an extension of the Bos-Wash corridor, which is firmly "Northern". If the NOVA suburbs were to comprise a majority of the state's population, a case could very well be made that it's not really "Southern" anymore. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...lation_map.png |
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