Pleasures come, if sorrows follow: Though the tocsin sound, ere long, Ding dong!
POINT It is sung to the knell Of a churchyard bell, And a doleful dirge, ding dong, O!
But the owner of Horned Toad is sitting in a chair down in Portland, a man named Reilly, and that thing on Ding Dong's back is Slimy Red, a man who has been warned off every track in the West.
As to Ding Dong it was simply a question of whether the black had improved and Waster gone back enough, through being thrown out of training, to bring the two together.
Bob mounted the top of a hogshead with his hen in one hand and a stick of wood in the other, and began the following harangue— “Ding dong, ding dong, ding dong!
Allegre took down from word of mouth and communicated to the late Damase Arbaud a Provencal version, which runs as follows: His scarlet cape the Prior donned, Ding dong, dong ding dong!
Now, Ringer, to the belfry speed, Ding dong, dong ding dong!
All must sip the cup of sorrow, I to-day and thou to-morrow: This the close of every song - Ding dong!
HE] It is sung to the knell Of a churchyard bell, And a doleful dirge, ding dong, O!
Louie and Twist still sat over their wine at Ding Dong's.
Louie and Twist sat down at the table in Ding Dong's, from which Pioggi had been driven, and demanded refreshment in the guise of wine.
Stall him off be tellin' him you'll see him to-night at Ding Dong's.
Pioggi had seated himself at a beer table in Ding Dong's.
DING DONG MINE At the head of the bay is Gulval, near which lies the Ding Dong Mine, famous as the oldest in Cornwall, so old indeed that it has long since (1880) retired into private life.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "ding dong" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.