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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

Out of the Question

Will0ughby was out of the question.
--Sense and Sensibility (Jane Austen, 1811), Vol. 1, Chapter 11
at 5:55 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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  • Wit and Sin

 

Really Regency

B.A. Sweeney, Copyright 2007-2009