A state in the western United States; mountainous in the west and north with the Great Plains in the east.
1The natives belonged to the tribe of which Pe-mul-wy was the leader.
2He would be as O-wy as O-wy could be.
3But them 'at orders their wy's by what licht they hae, there's no fear o' them.
4There's a wy to mike a living, lydy!
5Of course she is, in a wy.
6Sometimes it was white like water; sometimes blue, like the sea; sometimes red, like "carrie-wy-in-gin" (sunrise).
7Thats wy I feld down cellar.
8He'll fix ye up ef anybody cun; though I'm doubtin' yer in a bad wy, only wy ye tak it.
9Hi didn't mean for to do it-butme temper-thewy the blighter's used us blokes-hand the nyme on top o' that--
10She mightna see how it was to be done, but kennin' what a crittur he is, she maun be sure he would find a wy.
11Gavinia, much distressed, read aloud to Corp a newspaper attack on the political article, and all he said was, "He'll find a wy."
12Griff stroked in a rapid W and then a T: WY YEAST.
13Wy, py Chorge, dot dog he would eat baint yoost de same like-
14Wy, clammin's goin' arter clams; didn't ye never eat no clam-chowder?
15Drumtochty is no a pairish tae trifle wi', an' it disna like new-fangled wys.
16Paper presented at the Winter Conference on Discourse, Text, and Cognition, Jackson Hole, WY.