Lexicographical Neighbors of Ohone
Literary usage of Ohone
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Jacobite Relics of Scotland: Being the Songs, Airs, and Legends, of the by James Hogg (1819)
"0 fume ! O hone ! We came to Westminster; ohone! ohone! ... ohone! For the sauce
of his tongue, To prison dragg'd along, 'Cause he did what was wrong. ..."
2. The world's wit and humor: an encyclopedia of the classic wit and humor of by Lionel Strachey (1906)
"Widow Malone DID you hear of the Widow Malone, ohone! Who lived in the town of
Athlone, ohone ? Oh! she melted the hearts of the swains in them parts, ..."
3. The world's wit and humor: an encyclopedia of the classic wit and humor of by Lionel Strachey (1906)
"Widow Malone DID you hear of the Widow Malone, ohone! Who lived in the town of
Athlone, ohone ? Oh! she melted the hearts ..."
4. The Popular Poets and Poetry of Ireland: And Choice Selections in Prose from by Richard Nagle (1887)
"DID ye hear of the Wido\v Malone, ohone ! Who lived in the town of Athlone Alone ?
Oh ! she melted the hearts Of the swains in thorn parts, So lovely the ..."
5. A Treasury of Irish Poetry in the English Tongue by Stopford Augustus Brooke, Thomas William Rolleston (1900)
"THE WIDOW MALONE DID ye hear of the widow Malone, ohone ! ... Oh ! she melted
the hearts Of the swains in them parts—So lovely the widow Malone, ohone ! ..."
6. Irish Literature by Justin McCarthy, Maurice Francis Egan, Douglas Hyde, Charles Welsh, Gregory, James Jeffrey Roche (1904)
"But so modest was Mistress Malone, 'T was known No one ever could see her alone,
ohone! Let them ogle and sigh, They could ne'er catch her eye— So bashful ..."
7. Gems for the Fireside: Comprising the Most Unique, Touching, Pithy, and by Otis Henry Tiffany (1883)
"But so modest was Mistress Malone, T was known That no one could see her alone,
ohone 1 Let them ogle and sigh, They could ne'er catch her eye, ..."