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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, August 18, 2009

Scarcely

I could scarcely recognize any lineaments of my own. --Arthur Mervyn (Charles Brockden Brown, 1799), Chapter V
at 4:53 PM

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    • ▼  August (13)
      • To Make Someone Out To Be Something
      • To Buy Someone Off
      • Totally
      • Scarcely
      • At a Loss
      • Total as Adjective
      • Something "Happening"
      • Addicted to Something
      • "Pretty" as Adverb
      • To Have Something Occur to Someone
      • To Be in the Dumps
      • Everyday
      • To Turn a Deaf Ear to Something
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Links

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  • History Hoydens
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  • May 1812
  • The Domino Effect
  • The Regency Musical Timeline
  • The Scattered Proud
  • Wit and Sin

 

Really Regency

B.A. Sweeney, Copyright 2007-2009