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"I will not put up with this sort of English."
A couple from Georgia and a couple from the Northeast were seated side by
side on an airplane.
The girl from Georgia, being friendly and all, said, "So, where y'all
from?"
The Northeast girl said, "From a place where they know better than to use a
preposition at the end of a sentence."
The girl from Georgia sat quietly for a few moments and then replied:
"So, where y'all from, bitch?"
In low German or Dutch you can say:
"Ik leg m'n boek neer"
or
"I lay my book down".
The verb involved is the separable verb "neerleggen" meaning "to lay / set down"
Taking Churchill's example, the verb involved is not "put" but rather "put up with" As we lack a facility for turning "put up with" into a solid, single verb ( like neerleggen ), I'll use _-es, à la programmer-eese.