• And the section on limericks is simply bizarre: is there a difference between the 'radio limerick' and any other sort?
  • No one is completely sure where the name “limerick” comes from, but it is probably a reference to the city or county of Limerick in western Ireland.
  • We’ll be publishing here over the next few days a series of posts to give everyone a glimpse of all the things that went on in #Limerick on 15 and 16 July…
  • The defining "foot" of a limerick’s meter is usually the anapaest, (ta-ta-TUM), but limericks are also considered amphibrachic (ta-TUM-ta).
  • The county seat is the administratively independent city of Limerick. The county’s northern boundary, with County Clare, is the River Shannon and its estuary.
  • Limerick şehrinde otel arayın. Limerick otellerindeki son fiyat ve fırsatları görmek için tarihlerinizi girin. Check-in tarihi.
  • What the place didn't spawn was limerick verse, which evolved in 18th-century England, presumably from a nonsense lyric that referred to the city or county.
  • Two Owls and a Hen, Four Larks and a Wren, Have all built their nests in my beard!' One of Lear’s funnier attempts is “Limerick No. 80” from that same volume
  • Limerick is one of the constituent cities of the Cork–Limerick–Galway corridor which has a population of 1 million people.
  • A limerick is a humorous poem that follows a fixed structure of five lines. It follows a rhyme scheme of AABBA and makes use of anapestic meter.