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New England
NEW ENGLAND
Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language
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1998
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© Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language 1998, originally published by Oxford University Press 1998. (Hide copyright information)
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NEW ENGLAND. The name of the six north-easternmost states of the US (Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island); the site of the second oldest permanent English settlement on the North American mainland. The New England colonies were populated by Puritans mainly from
EAST ANGLIA, who came to the New World primarily for religious reasons. Because of their predominantly common origin and cultural unity, the New England settlers formed a more homogeneous community than did colonists elsewhere.
The Puritan inheritance
The character of the colonists was early famed for its seriousness, emphasis on the work ethic, and a social consciousness that sprang from the scriptural injunction to charity; this was, however, often expressed as a tendency to enforce their view of what is good on those who did not share it. The conflict between Puritanism and pleasure can be seen in much of American social life to the present day. New England has served as the school-house and conscience of the US. One of its most famous sons, Noah
WEBSTER, was a force in shaping the
DICTIONARY and school-book tradition of the country; his name has entered the lore of the nation as a synonym for dictionaries.
Linguistic features
The terms applied popularly to present-day New England speech are often the same as those used in the 17c to characterize the language of the English Puritans: a NASAL TWANG, high-pitched, harsh, and unmusical. In fact, however, New England is divided between two rather different
DIALECTS:
Eastern New England, with Boston as its hub, and
Western New England, which blends into upper New York State as the wellspring of the
Inland Northern dialect that sweeps across the northern tier of states to the Pacific. One of the defining characteristics of these two dialects is their treatment of
r when not followed by a vowel. Eastern New England is non-rhotic, articulating it much as British RP does, with a gliding vowel. Western New England, on the other hand, is
RHOTIC, as is most of the US. See
DIALECT (AMERICA).
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England regaining one-day appetite
Newspaper article from: The Sunday Telegraph London; 9/10/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...2 but cast off their new tag of being the world...after a wasted year, England are working out what...flatter pitches where the new ball swings less, England have to make more of...week illustrated how England score 90-odd for three...
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England ripe for a thrashing; JONNY WILKINSON sits it out (above) as Olly Barkley (far left) races clear to score a try for England. He suffers a frightening tackle (left) as he is speared tothe ground.
Newspaper article from: The Mail on Sunday (London, England); 9/9/2007; 700+ words
; ...itwill take a miracle for this England team to ps revent a heavy defeat...half was lamentable. While New Zealandand Australia compiled...opposition earlier in theday, England finished their game on the back...point. To make matters worse, England may now lose captain Phil Vickery...
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ENGLAND TAKE A BATTERING; Woodward's injury worries after Fiji scare ENGLAND 45 FIJI 24.(RUGBY UNION)
Newspaper article from: Birmingham Evening Mail (England); 10/21/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...other surviving nations that England do not play well under pressure. "I believe that England will have to play a lot better...Springboks," said Fiji's New Zealand coach Brad Johnstone...that if you run the ball at England they are vulnerable. "The...
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England tour lurches into disaster zone
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 12/6/1996; ; 700+ words
; Cricket England 197 & 180 Mashonaland 280 & 98-3 Mashonaland win by 7 wkts England's tour of Zimbabwe reached...winter's tour of Zimbabwe and New Zealand is intended to produce...everything has gone wrong for an England side short on confidence and...
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England in the 1690s: Revolution, Religion and War
Magazine article from: Anglican and Episcopal History; 6/1/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...reestablished in Scotland. In England the nonjuring schism devastated...including John Tillotson as the new archbishop. The schism would...dissenters in the Church of England, moderate and liberal churchmen...showing us how the people of England viewed their situation, and...
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ENGLAND'S SIX OF THE BEST; England 50 Ireland 18.(Rugby Union)
Newspaper article from: Birmingham Evening Mail (England); 2/7/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...for two years, and no wonder. England's coach had just watched his side launch the new Six Nations Championship with a...has often talked about but which England have so rarely managed to deliver. England played with pace and panache...
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England must walk at Lord's before trying to run Mike Atherton's appointment as stand-in captain may just prove the unexpected decision which puts a spanner in the works for the rampaging Australians
Newspaper article from: The Sunday Telegraph London; 7/15/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...captain is exactly the fillip that England needs. As soon as one leader...hardened. The re-appointment of England's most experienced captain...much better, for them, a new captain they could have bullied...Hussain was injured before. Now, England have learnt to live without...
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England left to read agonising final chapter.
Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England); 1/27/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...two previous one-day innings for new-look England, Mark Alleyne four and Vikram Solanki...bowling, systematically suffocated England's chances of adding to their Bloemfontein...nudged up to almost six an over and England required 72 from the final 72 deliveries...
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ENGLAND LACK KILLER TOUCH.(Sports)
Newspaper article from: Sports Argus (Birmingham, England); 6/26/1999; 700+ words
; ...Williams, Crowley, Kearns. ENGLAND: Perry, Rees, Catt, Guscott...Greening. Referee: C Hawke (New Zealand). England coach Clive Woodward felt his team...when the pressure really came on, England could find no real answer, and...
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England embarrassed by desperate display
Newspaper article from: The Sunday Telegraph London; 6/27/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...was a desperately bad defeat. England conceded six tries, to go with...shipped in two Tests against New Zealand, and they also copped...won with less possession than England and they won with a style that England conspicuously lacked. It couldn...
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New England
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to United States History
New England. Consisting of six states...nation's smallest), New England, named by Captain John Smith...movements that swept over New England after 1830: temperance...Civil War strengthened New England's industrial might. But...
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John England
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...Cork on Sept. 23, 1786, John England was educated in a Protestant...was appointed bishop of the new diocese of Charleston, S. C. Arriving in America in 1820, England discovered among the disorganized...Philadelphia and New York, England attracted Irish Catholic loyalties...
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New England Electric System
Book article from: International Directory of Company Histories
New England Electric System 25 Research Drive Westborough...steam-generating plants. In 1926 the New England Power System, the Northeastern Power...out until 1947, when NEPA emerged as New England Electric System, a new holding company...
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Tudor Dynasty (England)
Encyclopedia entry from: Europe, 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World
...Henry VII (England) ; Henry VIII (England) ; James I and VI (England and Scotland) ; Mary I (England) ; Stuart Dynasty (England and Scotland) . BIBLIOGRAPHY Brigden, Susan. New Worlds, Lost Worlds: The Rule of the Tudors, 1485 –...
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New England Confederation
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
NEW ENGLAND CONFEDERATION NEW ENGLAND CONFEDERATION, the United Colonies of New England, consisting of Connecticut, New Haven, Massachusetts, and Plymouth colonies, founded on 19 May 1643. Only "heretical" Rhode Island was excluded from...
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