[17] Fifth Edition, 1872, pp. 171-172.
[18] The Forum, Vol. 14, p. 465.
[19] Sulgrove, p. 90.
[20] “Dialect Notes,” Part VIII, p. 392.
[21] “The New Purchase,” p. 143.
[22] “Dialect Notes,” Part IV, p. 211.
[23] D before i or u does not become j in cultivated usage anywhere at the west. Personally, I have never heard Injiana within the State; but I have heard it from a Bostonian, a native of Maine, who had never lived outside of New England.
[24] “Souvenir of the Western Association of Writers,” 1891.
[25] “Indiana Methodism,” p. 317.
[26] Edson’s “Early Indiana Presbyterianism,” p. 171.