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April 4, 2008

No Taxonomy Without Representation

dictionary.jpgMy sister, after spending over a decade away from the Washington area, recently moved back to attend graduate school. As she had been away a good long time, and was only in her early teens when our family decamped for Orlando, Florida (a move we all regretted, trust me), she thought it wise to take the time to refamiliarize herself with the area. And, being a child of an employee of the American Automobile Association (hence the move to Florida), she was well versed in the lore of guidebooks and TripTiks. So she went out and purchased several.

One of the things she bought was a pocket-sized guide to Washington from a publisher named Inside Out. As a package, Inside Out's D.C. guide, revised in 2005, is pretty good. It has maps that unfold and enlarge like origami butterflies, a decent -- if not exhaustive -- run down on area attractions, a compass for those moments when you forget how to count or spell, and even a pen with a tiny light...you know, for those times when it's better to light one tiny penlight than curse the darkness. In short, it's a nice and inoffensive little guide. Until you get to the last page.

Unfortunately, that's where the good people at Inside Out attempt to lay out an essential glossary of D.C.-centric terminology, and, my oh my, are they ever out of their depths. The effort ranges from the adorably parochial to the hopelessly stupid, and throughout, it is hilarious. So much so that the best thing one could possibly do, is quote the whole thing at length, which we'll do after the jump. I promise you, I am making none of this up.

Titled "Speak it," the glossary is divided into two sections. The first deals specifically with the culture of politics. It is actually sort of cute in the way it strains to be so cynical.

POLITI-SPEAK DC politi-speak is what you will hear from the politicians and their entourages in bars and restaurants throughout the city.

Here is what their jargon really means

bounce effect: Occurs when a presidential candidate does better than expected in the primaries, causing a "bounce" out of the primary. In other words, the candidate receives increased media attention, which leads to more funding.

the big tent: In which everyone is welcome in a political party, as in "Step right up and join our party, we need your vote (but don't expect anything in return)."

handler: The marketers who sell the product, which in this case just happens to be the political candidate.

pol: One of the more pleasant names for a politician

pork (pork barrel): Excess "fat" in the budget that only benefits a politician's constituents, for instance the building of a highway or bridge to expedite local traffic

soft money: Money that cannot be legally given to a federal candidate so is given instead to the candidate's political party to spend in a way that will benefit the candidate.

spin: To mainpulate the message for your own purposes. This is what press secretaries do for a living.

straw poll: An unofficial, nonbinding trial vote, used by some state parties during a presidential primary race.

wonk: flunky steeped in arcane governmental minutiae such as details of Sweden's public plumbing system.

Yes. Those are indeed, the NINE TERMS you will hear in every bar and restaurant. If only Inside Out had stopped there!

Because the next section is on street lingo. They're not precisely wrong in these usages...some are tantalizingly close to correct, so some attempt at doing the research and getting it right was made. It's just that the whole section is just a little off (and a lot dated), as if it was prepared by some impossibly earnest alien being who was probably sent by his overlords to study Sweden's public plumbing system.

DC SPEAK Meanwhile out there on the streets, there is a whole other language going down.

bama: A very uncool person.

bangin': Something very good.

beat your feet: To join in on an improvised go-go dance competition. [Ed. Note: And what tourist doesn't find themselves faced with that opportunity?]

bumpin': Also something very good.

cosign: To support someone in an argument.

cuz: Short for cousin.

don't wrap me up: This is a request for another person to make themselves clear.

off the hook: An all-encompassing superlative used long and often in street talk.

rollers: Police. "The rollers locked me up."

So there you have it, faithful readers! Leave your best sentences in the comments. And don't wrap me up, wonks!


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Comments (23)

I believe Guy Fieri would take issue at the suggestion that the phrase "off the hook" is somehow outdated.

It is, however, indeed "money."

Whoomp! There it is!

 

Can you cats dig it?

 

I love the fact that "Bama" is in a guidebook about DC.

 

So, I haven't been in DC for very long, less than year.

However I work with DC teens and "roller" in DC is not the police. A roller is an easy girl, one who is promiscuous you might say. Come on now.

 

pol: One of the more pleasant names for a politician

Tell that to the Khmer Rouge.

 

AAA is one jive ass turkey, word!

 

There ars a lot more connotations to "bama" than just "really uncool," and I'm sort of surprised a consumer-oriented mainstream pub like this would even try to open that can of worms. I've always thought of it as intra-racial term of prejudice used to describe those from a more rural and less educated background. The (mostly white) tourists who visit DC might want to be careful who they practice their new vocabulary on.

 

I thought the term for the police was "po-po", as in "the park po-po made me pour out my beer."

 

I thought "po-po" was the police too. I have never heard anyone call them rollers before.

Why isn't "kirkin' out" on the list?

 

There ars a lot more connotations to "bama" than just "really uncool,"

Well a Bama isn't "really uncool" like an older relative using too much slang or an old geezer buying a sports car, it's like everything about the person is just whack. Jacked up clothes, bad skin, halitosis, poor taste in music, lame car; really it means that everything about a person is just kind of off.

I've always thought of it as intra-racial term of prejudice used to describe those from a more rural and less educated background.

That too.

 

I saw this list a few years ago.

I agree, the terms aren't exactly that incorrect, it's just a few of them are definitely not specific to DC.

"Off the hook"??? Do they really think that this phrase is only used here?

"Cuz"?!?!?!

 

call it what it is. it's not bama, it's 'bama, as in Alabama, as in "backwards, hickish, white trashy, trailer parky, white tacky, would-be-described-as-so-ghetto-if-we-were-talking-about-an-iphone-knockoff-that's-really-an-altoids-tin"

I suppose that the InsideOut people just wouldn't muster the courage...

 

I use bama on the regular. From Urban Dictionary:


1. Bama

"Bama"
Originated from Black youth in Washington DC.

1. Original meaning was "cant dress well" or "fashion misfit"


2. Now the word has a more general use meaning "person", as how Whites use "Dude"


1. That bama wearing a coat in the summer

2. Tell bama to meet me at the store.


2. bama

a bama is a wack ass person is a busta every one in DC knows what this word means but its hard to put a definiton on it

damn you look like a straight bama is that outfit

3. Bama

Originally, a Bama was a southerner (from Alabama, for instance) trying to blend in up north, but was so obviously country that it didn't work.
Now it's more general and just means something funny-looking, unsophisticated or country as hell.

"Why is dude still wearing BUM Equipment? That's some Bama shit!"


 

I dont think it had anything to do with education and that was the first I have ever heard it being linked to education. I have always heard it in reference to clothing or in general just being a Bama...

 

Bama: someone from BAltimore MAryland.

which also is uncool.

 

There's also the radio show, "The Bama Hour"; I remember when Nap Turner used to host it.

 

I'm surprised that bama has been used so few times in dcist.

Growing up, we used it to mean someone with no style, especially in terms of clothes and no clue.

It looks like Inside Out interviewed a bunch of wannabes for the dictionary. Dem bamas.


 

Great find, Jason! And I agree that they are often tantalizingly close.

I have indeed heard rollers used in the D.C. area in some relation to police, but it was used by actual policemen in reference to those pre-LED red and blue light bulbs that used to actually roll around in circles on the roofs of their cars. Example, "I turned on my rollers and proceeded through the red light."

It's easy to imagine an etymology through synecdoche, but I'd be curious to see their documentation of usage.

 

too good. be careful of what you say about baltimore, it's getting a lot of attention on underground hipster websites. With the help of The Wire, many a tight jean wearing, pbr drinkin', 'fixie' riding hipster, is looking to Bmore for that 'urban experience.'

I'm going on to amazon now to prep in jive-speak for going out in "a-mo" with my cuz, to this off the hook club. Tom-Tom seems like a perfect spot to beat my feet.

 

I may be "dc4life" but Bmore is fun and your money lasts a heck of a lot longer there. I can buy more skinny jeans and lattes up there.

 

Well, I feel bad now. Bama is my mother-in-law's grandmother nickname. From my newphew's misprouncing grandma. I never knew we were using an "intra-racial term of prejudice used to describe those from a more rural and less educated background"!

Although, we are from the south, so maybe it's appropriate...

 

"I've always thought of it as intra-racial term of prejudice used to describe those from a more rural and less educated background."

Yeah, that's exactly right.

I would offer that the youngun who wrote the glossary was lunchin'.

 

"Bama" is the black version of "redneck" or "hillbilly." That's what you'd call your cousin who lives on a farm down in North Cackalacka.

 
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