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e. "I consider him very truthful," is another expression. "He stimulates too much." "He dissipates awfully." And they are very fond of using the noun as a verb, as--"I _suspicion_ that's a fact." "I _opinion_ quite the contrary." The word _considerable_ is in considerable demand in the United States. In a work in which the letters of the party had been given to the public as specimens of good style and polite literature, it is used as follows:-- "My dear sister, I have taken up the pen early this morning, as I intend to write _considerable_." (Life and Remains of Charles Pont.) The word great is oddly used for fine, splendid. "She's the _greatest_ gal in the whole Union." But there is one word which we must surrender up to the Americans as their _very own_, as the children say. I will quote a passage from one of their papers:-- "The editor of the _Philadelphia Gazette_ is wrong in calling absquatiated a Kentucky _phrase_ (he may well say phrase instead of _word_.) It may prevail there, but its origin was in South Carolina, where it was a few years since regularly derived from the Latin, as we can prove from undoubted authority. By the way, there is a little _corruption_ is the word as the _Gazette_ uses it, _absquatalized_ is the true reading." Certainly a word worth quarrelling about! "Are you cold, miss?" said I to a young lady, who pulled the shawl closer over her shoulders. "_Some_," was the reply. The English _what_? implying that you did not hear what was said to you, is changed in America to the word _how_? "I reckon", "I calculate", "I guess," are all used as the common English phrase, "I suppose." Each term is said to be peculiar to different states, but I found them used everywhere, one as often as the other. _I opine_, is not so common. A specimen of Yankee dialect and conversation:-- "Well now, I'll tell you--you know Marble Head?" "Guess I do." "Well, then, you know Sally Hackett." "No, indeed." "Not know Sally Hackett? Why she lives at Marble Head." "Guess I don't." "You don't mean to say that?" "Yes, indeed." "And you really don't know Sally Hackett?" "No, indeed." "I guess you've heard talk of her?" "No, indeed." "Well, that's considerable odd. Now, I'll tell you--Ephraim Bagg, he that has the farm three miles from Marble Head--just as--but now, are you sure you don't know Sally Hackett?" "No, indeed." "Well, he's a pr
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