Lexicographical Neighbors of Ritted
Literary usage of Ritted
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Minstrelsy, Ancient and Modern: With an Historical Introduction and Notes by William Motherwell (1846)
"Hawks and hounds they may seek me, As I trow well they be ; ' * ritted, ...
In the copy obtained by the Editor, the word " ritted " did not occur, ..."
2. Minstrelsy, Ancient and Modern: With an Historical Introduction and Notes by William Motherwell (1846)
"Hawks and hounds they may seek me, As I trow well they be ; * ritted, ... In the
copy obtained by the Editor, the word " ritted" did not occur, ..."
3. Minstrelsy, Ancient and Modern: With an Historical Introduction and Notes by William Motherwell (1846)
"Hawks and hounds they may seek me, As I trow well they be ; * ritted, thrust
violently. ... In the copy obtained by the Editor, the word " ritted" did not ..."
4. English and Scottish Ballads edited by Francis James Child (1860)
"Young Johnstone had a nut-brown sword, Hung low down by his gair, And he ritted
it through the young Col'nel, " That word he ne'er spak mai r. 15. ..."
5. Publications by English Dialect Society (1887)
"The ears of oats are so called, and if there is a good crop, and the ears are
full and large, they are said to be well ritted. ..."
6. The Popular Science Monthly (1880)
"... various owners for the purpose of identification : " Cropped near ear, upper
key bitted far, a pop on the head and another at the tail head, ritted, ..."