¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Rollicked
1. rollick [v] - See also: rollick
Lexicographical Neighbors of Rollicked
Literary usage of Rollicked
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Age of the Reformation by Preserved Smith (1920)
"He laughed not because he scorned life but because he loved it; he did not "warm
both hands" before the fire of existence, he rollicked before its blaze. ..."
2. The Popular Science Monthly (1872)
"Day and night she rollicked in tiny song, her best performances being usually at
night. To me it was often a strange delight, when, having wrought into the ..."
3. The Living Age by Making of America Project, Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell (1893)
"... rollicked uproariously every night, while Lazarus was often called in as a
spectator if not as a participator, so that the mere sight of so much wassail ..."
4. The Governments of Europe by Frederic Austin Ogg (1920)
"Voters as a matter of course accepted the bribes that were tendered them and ate
and drank and smoked and rollicked at the candidate's expense throughout ..."
5. The Bookman (1915)
"... wisest work of such artists as Forain and Willette and Steinlin and Ibels, of
Guillaume, Redon, and Robida, and literally hundreds of others, rollicked ..."
6. The Quarterly Review by William Gifford, George Walter Prothero, John Gibson Lockhart, John Murray, Whitwell Elwin, John Taylor Coleridge, Rowland Edmund Prothero Ernle, William Macpherson, William Smith (1897)
"There, again, rollicked a party of bearded, sun-blackened seamen, half traders,
half buccaneers, puffing clouds of smoke from under their ..."