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Review of Bartlett); 41.656 (do.); 42.97 (do.); 42.342 (do); 42.619 (do.); 42.643 (Reply to White); 43.88 (White on Bartlett); 43.109 (freight train and spool); 43.379 (White on Bartlett); 43.656 (do.); 44.654 (White, "Assorted Americanisms"); 45.428 (Reply to White); 45.669 (White, "British Americanisms"); 47.697 (White, supplementary to Bartlett articles); 48.849; 52.792; 53.286; 53.290; 55.593 (R. A. Proctor, "The Misused H of England"); 55.856 (right away); 76.708; 104.135 (dialects); 115.360 (concludes that "we [Americans] have an unquestionable right to the pronunciation natural to ourselves").

BOOKMAN: 5.96; 11.446 (survivals of old pronunciations); 12.243 (do.); 26.533 (Whibley); 26.586 (satire on Whibley); 27.63 (reply to Whibley-calls him "careless and peevish").

BUFFALO COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER: Sept. 10-11, 1888. (Article on pronunciation, from Critic.)

CENTURY: 47(25).848 ("Wild Flowers of English Speech in America," by Edward Eggleston); 48(26).867 ("Folk Speech in America," by Edward Eggleston).

CHAUTAUQUAN: 22.436 (American dialects).

CHICAGO NEWS, March 10, 1890 (London letter from Eugene Field).

COSMOPOLITAN: 30.274 (by Brander Matthews, chatty and general but sensible and interesting).

CRITIC: 13.97, 104, 115, 263; 36.81.

CURRENT LITERATURE: 35.492.

DIAL: 14.233; 33.29; 48.40; 54.380; 95.11 (review of Thorn

ton).

DIALECT NOTES: 1.428 ("British vs. American English" from the British point of view). Notes on American provincialisms appear in every issue of Dialect Notes, and it would therefore be useless to list them here.

ECLECTIC MAGAZINE: 132.60 (by William Archer).

EDUCATION: 13.367.

ENGLISH JOURNAL: 2.266; 6.1. ("The Standard of American Speech," by Prof. F. N. Scott.)

FORUM: 2.117.

("Americanisms in England," by A. C. Coxe.) GALAXY: 21.521 (White, Pronunciation); 24.376 (White on

Bartlett); 24.681 (do.).

HARPER'S BAZAR: 30.958 (by T. W. Higginson).

HARPER'S MONTHLY: 66.665 (Sussex Expressions); 83.215 (Brander Matthews, "Briticisms and Americanisms"); 85.277 (Matthews, American spelling); 90.252 (H. C. Lodge, Shakespeare's Americanisms); 126.417; 126.618; 127.133; 127.274; 127.586 (last five by T. R. Lounsbury); 129.103; 131.436 (Kentucky mountain provincialisms); 140.846 (Plea for disregarding British usage when it differs from American).

HARPER'S WEEKLY: 39.1037 (W. D. Howells); 54.6; 56.25; 59.105.

HOME JOURNAL: Oct. 25, 1899.

HOURS AT HOME: 5.361 (Review of "Queen's English," by F. W. Shelton).

INDEPENDENT: 52.410; 53.2706; 65.765; 67.477.

INTERNATIONAL REVIEW: 8.472 ("English Language in America," by Lounsbury; 8.596 (do.).

JOURNAL OF EDUCATION: 84.41 (pronunciation).
LADIES' HOME JOURNAL: 20.46 ("American brogue”).
LAKESIDE MONTHLY: 3.154.

LIFE: 74.47 (Bright satire, worth reading).

LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE: 3.310 (Provincialisms); 4.345; 5.545; 19.513; 31.378 (Review of Freeman in Longman's); 44.121 (mugwump).

LITERARY DIGEST: 46.1386; 47.212; 50.1468; 50.830; 53.708; 53.848.

LITERARY WORLD: 14.364.

(LITTELL'S) LIVING AGE: 20.79 (Review of Bartlett, from Boston Advertiser); 95.218 ("Inroads upon English," from Blackwood, as above); 100.636 (Review of Zincke's "Last Winter in the United States," from Spectator); 114.446; 120.240 ("United States English," from Chambers' Journal); 132.821 (from Leisure Hour); 155.483 (Freeman's Longmans' article); 179.298 (The Great American Language, from Cornhill Magazine); 204.438 ("All the Year Round" article); 219.514; 251.654; 254.123. M'CLURE'S MAGAZINE: 47.87.

MAGAZINE OF AMERICAN HISTORY: 12.564 (C. L. Norton, Political Americanisms); 13.98 (do.); 13.199 (do.); 13.295 (do.); 13.394 (do.); 13.495 (do.); 13.599 (comments on foregoing).

MODERN PHILOLOGY: 6.53.

MUNSEY'S MAGAZINE: 40.345 (Brander Matthews; notes formation of "American Language League" to change name of our speech to "American").

NATION: 5.428; 6.392; 11.56 (Pennsylvania provincialisms); 11.72 (do.); 14.28 (Savage Review of De Vere); 14.45 (Review of Hoosier Schoolmaster); 16.148 (North Carolina provincialisms); 16.183 (do.); 17.113 (Words from Indian languages); 18.380 (Review of Barringer); 21.8 (Penn. pro.); 26.171 (Review of Bartlett); 26.243 (Review of Bartlett); 32.184 (blizzard); 32.208 (do.); 32.220 (do.); 32.260 (do.); 49.15 (Review of Farmer); 57.484; 84.28; 95.11 (Review of Thornton); 108.698 (Review of Mencken).

NATIONAL QUARTERLY REVIEW: 2.230 (Review of Pickering and Bartlett).

NEW ENGLAND MAGAZINE: 6.583 (shows New England provincialisms to be old English); 15.337.

NEW ENGLANDER: (N.S.) 3.429.

NEW YORK EVENING POST: April 12, 1919 (Review of
Mencken).

NEW YORK TRIBUNE: Aug. 14, 1881 (Proctor); May 17,
1884 (G. W. Smalley on Sala on Tucker); Sept. 29,
1894 (Smalley).

NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW: 3.355 (Review of Pickering); 69.94 (Review of Bartlett); 91.507 (Review of Marsh's Lectures); 136.55 (Tucker, American English); 141.431 ("Slang in America," by Walt Whitman); 146.709 (lagniappe and brottus); 147.102 (brottus); 147.348 (brottus, buckra, goober); 147.475 (lagniappe and brottus); 207.91 (general review of the subject, concluding that "the day may easily come when an American may find himself unable to make himself understood in England, and the same with an Englishman in America"); 209.697 (Review of Mencken; calls it "the book of the month"). OUTLOOK: 72.397; 89.236; 91.17; 96.632 ("Yankee in British Fiction," absurdities of his speech).

POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY: 32.387; 69.324.
PUTNAM'S MONTHLY: 16.519.

RURAL NEW YORKER: 49.231 (North Carolina Provincialisms).

SAN FRANCISCO NEWSLETTER: Vol. 49, No. 25 (Pronunciation).

SCHOOL REVIEW:23.381 (British and American Pronunciation
-thoughtful and interesting).

SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE: 29.360 (Brander Matthews); 41.653
(H. C. Lodge); 45.378; 68.621 (Brander Matthews).
SCRIBNER'S MONTHLY: 3.379 (Review of De Vere).
SOUTHERN LITERARY MESSENGER: 2.110; 14.623 (Review of
Bartlett).

SOUTHERN METHODIST QUARTERLY: N. S., 9.248 (valuable
article).

SOUTHERN REVIEW: N. S., 9.290 and 9.529 (Review of Bartlett's and Webster's dictionaries, severe on American English).

For other references, arranged on a different plan from that followed in the foregoing list, and including matter not strictly germane to the purposes of this book, see Mencken, p. 323, and also Dialect Notes, 1.13, 80, 254 and 344, and 2.151. The list in the initial number of Dialect Notes, and placed at the beginning of that issue, was intended as a supplement to the first bibliography of Americanisms ever compiled, which was that appended by the present writer to his paper on "American English," Albany Institute Transactions, Vol. 10, p. 358.

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