Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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For instance, Wellman, a South-Carolina based maker of products used in plastic soda bottles, has let go of 80% of its employees, shed 80% of its debt and reduced revenues by nearly 60%.
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Every exertion was made throughout the State to repel the insidious influences of the demagogues of South-Carolina and Virginia, and but for the Jesuitical management of the politicians at Richmond, the 'Old North 'would have remained loyal.
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The politicians of South-Carolina, more open and frank in the exposition of their views than other leaders in the South, have been obliged to submit the control of their discretion to the more crafty and subtle influences of other States.
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South-Carolina, which was on picket-duty at Port-Royal Ferry, we had an opportunity of seeing something of Port-Royal Island.
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It had its first ebullition in 1832, when South-Carolina assumed the right to nullify the revenue laws of Congress.
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"It contains the most vivid and lifelike representation of a specimen family of poor South-Carolina whites we have ever read."
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They of South-Carolina employed Nullification long before they dreamed of Anti-Abolition.
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The South-Carolina platform for a new government had close resemblance to the ancient Roman -- a patrician order of nobility, founded on the interested motive to uphold slavery; but allowing plebeian representation, to some extent, to the non-slaveholding classes.
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Massachusetts and South-Carolina, the two leading States in the promulgation of opposite theories.
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South-Carolina passed its act of folly and madness, it met with a firm opposition from the old Whig party, which still had here a vital existence.
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