Citations:hallabaloo


 * 1823, Edward Moor, Suffolk Words and Phrases: Or, An Attempt to Collect the Lingual Localisms of that County, page 162
 * Hallabaloo. Anoise — an uproar— a clamour. Hamper. To puzzle, perplex, trouble. &quot; He&#39;s sadly hamper&#39;d,&quot; means in uneasy, confined, circumstances. A lock  hamperd, is when the key cannot be turned or taken out. i Hanbury. The disease  to ...
 * 1889, Richard Soule, A Dictionary of English Synonymes and Synonymous Or Parallel Expressions: Designed as a Practical Guide to Aptness and Variety of Phraseology, page 203
 * ... manner, in whatever de ree. Hub, n. Nave (of a идее ). Hubbub, п. 1. Uproar, clamor, din, racket, hallabaloo, HULLABALoo, out cry. 2. Tumult, disorder,  confusion, dis turbance, riot. Hubbubboo, n. [Laux] Cry, howl, howling, wailing  ululation.
 * 1860, Joseph Emerson Worcester, A Dictionary of the English Language, page 701
 * )lillon. HflL-Ld-Bii-Léé&#39;, n. Uproar; hallabaloo. — See HALLABALOO. Gent. Mag. HULI.&#39;~DD&#39;WN, 0. (Noah) Noting a shi when only the masts and sails are seen in  t e distance, the hull being concealed by the convexity of the sea. Sizmnonds.
 * 1911, John Trotwood Moore, The Gift of the Grass: Being the Autobiography of a Famous Racing Horse
 * &quot;Hallabaloo — hoo — you did it — you! &quot; he screamed demoniacally, and rising on his hind legs, with ears back and teeth glaring, he came at me like a fury  driven bear, his great fore feet, steel shod, fanning the air, striking forward like  great ...
 * 1872, James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps, A Dictionary of Archaic and Provincial Words, Obsolete Phrases, Proverbs, and Ancient Customs, from the Fourteenth Century, page 430
 * HALLABALOO. A noise, or uproar. HALLACKING. Idling; feasting; making merry. Hallacks. An idle fellow. North. H ALLAGE. The fee or toll due to the lord of a fair  or market. (.Fr.) H ALLAN. The passage or space between the outer and inner ...
 * 1836, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, The ancient mariner. Christabel. Miscellaneous poems. Remorse. Zapolya, page 143
 * Och! the hallabaloo! Och! och! how you&#39;ll wail, When the offal-fed vagrant Shall turn you as blue As the gas-light unfragrant, That gushes in jets from beneath his  own tail ;— &#39;TiIl swift as the mail, He at last brings the cramps on, That will twist ...