<DIV style="font-family:Arial, sans-serif; font-size:10pt;"><DIV>On September 28, 2005, Ben Zimmer in a thread on the jazz sense of "cool" wrote:</DIV>
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<DIV>"Cool" hit the mainstream c. 1952, when white teenagers across the country<BR>started using the word. See Doug Wilson's post on a June 23, 1952 article<BR>about teen slang in the (St. Joseph MI) _Herald-Press_, and also my<BR>followup on the 1952 movie "A Young Man's Fancy" (with a slang-slinging<BR>teenybopper calling her crush "really cool" and "a real cool Jonah"):<BR><BR><A href="http://listserv.linguistlist.org/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0410D&L=ADS-L&P=R355"><FONT color="#000000">http://listserv.linguistlist.org/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0410D&L=ADS-L&P=R355</FONT></A><BR><BR>That same year, "cool" was recognizable enough as teen slang to be<BR>included in numerous comic strips on N-Archive:<BR></quote></DIV>
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<DIV>I found a possibly related sense of "cool" from 1861:</DIV>
<DIV>Charles Dickens _Great Expectations_ published as a serial December 1, 1860 through August 3, 1861</DIV>
<DIV>Chapter 57 </DIV>
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<DIV>[Joe says to Pip, who is the narrator] "<snip>But she had wrote out a little coddleshell in her own hand a day or two afore the accident, leaving a cool four thousand to Mr. Matthew Pocket. And why, do you suppose, above all things, Pip, she left that cool four thousand unto him? 'Because of Pip's account of him the said Matthew.' <snip> And a cool four thousand, Pip!"</DIV>
<DIV> I never discoverd from whom Joe derived the conventional temperature of the four thousand pounds, but it appeared to make the sum of money more to him, and he had a manifest relish in insisting on its being cool.</DIV>
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<DIV> - Jim Landau</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV><BR> <BR><HR>Netscape. Just the Net You Need.</DIV>
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