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#188754 01/14/2010 6:51 PM
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today's word from Jeffrey Kacirk's Forgotten English calendar©
is Connecticutensian, an inhabitant of Connecticut [late 1700s].

(and, he suggests, Connecticuties is reserved for pretty girls. : )

tsuwm #188765 01/15/2010 2:41 AM
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Huh--what were the people in Massachusetts called, then?

Jackie #188767 01/15/2010 2:57 AM
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Massachusettser?
Massachusetter??
Massachusettean?!

tsuwm #188769 01/15/2010 2:59 AM
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Acc'g. to your example, they'd have been Massachusettsensians!

Jackie #188775 01/15/2010 11:08 AM
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with all due respect to any Massachusettians, I have heard the moniker Massholes...

:¬ p


formerly known as etaoin...
tsuwm #188776 01/15/2010 12:41 PM
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Connecticutensian

The common way to form an adjective from a place-name in Medieval Latin was to a suffix -ensis to the root. For example, Berkeleiensis from Berkeley. So, it's something that a educated person in the 18th century would've known about and possibly chuckled over as the name in question is from a Native American language and the resulting adjectival form is macaronic.


Ceci n'est pas un seing.

Moderated by  Jackie 

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