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The Days of Yore is a British historical play by Richard Cumberland.It was first staged at the Covent Garden Theatre on 13 January 1796. [1] The original cast included James Middleton as Alfred, King of England, George Davies Harley as Oddune, Earl of Devonshire, Alexander Pope as Voltimar, Elizabeth Clendining as Lothaire, James Thompson as Mollo, Willam Macready as Sibald, William Claremont ...
Once there was, and once there wasn't. In the long-distant days of yore, when haystacks winnowed sieves, when genies played jereed in the old bathhouse, [when] fleas were barbers, [when] camels were town criers, [and when] I softly rocked my baby grandmother to sleep in her creaking cradle, there was/lived, in an exotic land, far, far away, a ...
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The Days of Yore; De Monfort (play) A Dead Secret; Dead Secret (play) Death Drop; Death of England; Debtor and Creditor (play) Delays and Blunders; The Delinquent; The Dependent; Desperado Corner; Diana of Dobson's; Dickens' Women; The Dippers; The Disbanded Officer; The Discovery (play) The Dissembled Wanton; The Doating Lovers; The Doctor ...
For some dictionary users, purely pinyin-dependent sequencing such as cuānzi 镩子 "ice pick" to cūbào 粗暴 "rude; rough; crude" and nǎngshí 曩时 "(written) in olden days; of yore" to nánguā 南瓜 "pumpkin" "may be at least initially confusing". [10]
And to tell them of my forefathers who fought in days of yore, That I might have the right to wear the sash my father wore! Chorus: It is old but it is beautiful, and its colours they are fine It was worn at Derry, Aughrim, Enniskillen and the Boyne. My father wore it as a youth in bygone days of yore,
Perhaps this was the result of a fly-by-night recording approach – 2001’s White Blood Cells was knocked out with one week’s rehearsal and three days of recording.
yore, as in "of yore", usually "days of yore" "Born fossils" These words were formed from other languages, by elision, or by mincing of other fixed phrases.