[Ads-l] Dorchester

Amy West medievalist at W-STS.COM
Mon Apr 25 15:49:08 UTC 2016


So, that's implying to me more of a "dah-" vowel than "duh-". Getting a 
/t/ from the -ah-ch- of "dah-ches-tuh" makes sense to me (with the -ah- 
being low & front and the /t/ being a dental) . . .

---Amy West

On 4/24/16 12:00 AM, ADS-L automatic digest system wrote:
> Date:    Sat, 23 Apr 2016 15:56:49 +0000
> From:    Joel Berson<berson at ATT.NET>
> Subject: Re: Dorchester
>
> "Dot" not as a noun referring to the town, but rather as an adjective, according to:
>
> 5 Things You Didn't Know About Dorchester
>
>
>
> |   |
> |   |  |   |   |   |   |   |
> | 5 Things You Didn't Know About DorchesterThe Boston neighborhood of Dorchester is home to a lot of history. And there's a lot you don't know about it. Here are five things. |
> |  |
> | View on boston.cbslocal.com | Preview by Yahoo |
> |  |
> |   |
>
> 5. Not ‘The Dot’Perhaps you’ve heard Dorchester called ‘The Dot.’ But ‘The Dot’ is NOT short for Dorchester, at least according to people who are OFD. The Boston-centric website Universal Hub, relying on some help from long-time Dorchester residents, explains in its Wicked Good Guide To Boston English, Dot is “an adjective referring to something or somebody from Dorchester,” but it’s not a synonym for Dorchester. Only “people from Southie” use it that way, the definition explains. Instead, it only works in phrases like “Dot Rat” and “Dot Ave.” OFD, by the way, is short for “originally from Dorchester.” But you didn’t hear that here.
>
> (I remember initially being puzzled by "Dot Avenue.")
>
> Joel



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