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Really Regency

A Compendium of Words and Expressions Used Today That Were Used During the English Regency, 1811-1820 (Give or Take A Few Years Either Way.) The list now includes the language of Federal America (late 18th and early 19th centuries).

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Mutual Consent

[T]hey were sitting down together by mutual consent while the others were dancing.
--Sense and Sensibility (Jane austen, 1811), Vol. 1, Chapter 11
at 5:56 AM

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    • ▼  June (22)
      • To "Out" Something or Someone, Regency Style
      • To Do More Harm Than Good
      • To Put Up With Something or Someone
      • "Hello" in Regency Usage
      • In General
      • To Be Bent On Something
      • To Forego Something
      • Mutual Consent
      • Out of the Question
      • A "Hop"
      • To Find Out Something
      • To Be Sick of Something or Someone
      • Carried Away
      • To Be Off Somewhere
      • Shocked
      • Express Mail
      • To Be Something
      • At Any Rate
      • As Usual
      • To Make Something Clear
      • Being the Case
      • To Be on One's Guard
    • ►  May (8)

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B.A. Sweeney, Copyright 2007-2009