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#2 |
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LOL actually when I went to Ecuador I would catch my self talking to some of the guys we where working with in Domincan Street Spanish they looked at me like I was crazy then I had to remember where I was ! I wasnt as bad as the above caption though. Aparently Dime was offensive there i had to stop myself from saying that.
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#15 |
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#17 |
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#18 |
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I am confused because in the DR, people teach me street Dominican and love it when I say it. Especially, at the colmado I go to. The guy teaches me street Dominican all the time. My wifey teaches me street Dominican too and thinks it is funny when I talk like that and gets all happy and giddy when I talk like that. As soon as I master some of it, she teaches me more and more. So, it is wrong to speak it?
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#19 |
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I am confused because in the DR, people teach me street Dominican and love it when I say it. Especially, at the colmado I go to. The guy teaches me street Dominican all the time. My wifey teaches me street Dominican too and thinks it is funny when I talk like that and gets all happy and giddy when I talk like that. As soon as I master some of it, she teaches me more and more. So, it is wrong to speak it? There's nothing wrong with understanding the slang and street talk from a place you live at, but it's totally wrong to assume it's proper to use that type of way to talk to others in their native language! |
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#20 |
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I hear you but this is the opposite of what people do with me. They teach me tigre talk and the dominican ebonics and try to get me to speak it and laugh and teach me more and more. My girlfriend only wants me to talk to her like that. She teaches me the dominican ebonics all the time. At the colmado, the guy teaches me it and always wants me to talk like that.
As someone from the inner city in the USA. Ebonics was always something cool to speak. As a kid, it was the cool and in thing almost like kids who would say dude and cool in order to fit in. Sometimes in other languages with thick accents. Or "whatz up" or "wassup yo" or "son" or "kid" and other ebonic words. From my experiences the street talk is just a cool way of talking but it is not formal enough to use in professional or formal environments. There were people whose first language was spanish, french, german, even chines or koreans in bodegas who would speak ebonics in English and it really sounded ok. It was kind of cool. Also, it can be gangster like gangster talk. Lots of immigrants and foreigners talking like gangsters. In short, you can sound street or cool or whatever by speaking street dominican. It just depends who you do it with and how you do it. Just do not do it in formal environments and make it clear that you are proud to be you and you are not trying to be Dominican but for other reasons. If I were some white guy from suburbia or someone, no I would not feel comfortable talking ebonics in english or another language but I am an urban minority. It is ok for me to speak improper in a language. |
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