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Examples

  • How they had managed to survive during the ensuing week she could never quite understand, and then the Ho-don had come upon them and captured her.

    Tarzan the Terrible Edgar Rice Burroughs 1912

  • And a pact was sealed between Ja-don and Om-at that would ever make his tribe and the Ho-don allies and friends.

    Tarzan the Terrible Edgar Rice Burroughs 1912

  • Ho-don had had time to reach a point of comparative safety among the craggy ravines of the foothills.

    Tarzan the Terrible Edgar Rice Burroughs 1912

  • And so he set his face toward A-lur, pinning his faith upon his knowledge of the Ho-don tongue, his great strength and his native wit.

    Tarzan the Terrible Edgar Rice Burroughs 1912

  • "Great is the wisdom of the Ho-don," replied Om-at.

    Tarzan the Terrible Edgar Rice Burroughs 1912

  • He guessed that it represented either a very high order of ape or a very low order of man -- something akin to the Java man, perhaps; a truer example of the pithecanthropi than either the Ho-don or the

    Tarzan the Terrible Edgar Rice Burroughs 1912

  • "Only the Ho-don from the other side of the Valley of Jad-ben-Otho," she replied, "and they are not strangers."

    Tarzan the Terrible Edgar Rice Burroughs 1912

  • There were not many of them in Pal-ul-don, but what few there were were a terror to the women of the Waz-don and the Ho-don, for the old Tor-o-don bulls roamed the mountains and the valleys of Pal-ul-don between rutting seasons and woe betide the women who fell in their paths.

    Tarzan the Terrible Edgar Rice Burroughs 1912

  • By signs he tried to carry to the Ho-don the fact that he was following

    Tarzan the Terrible Edgar Rice Burroughs 1912

  • When one of your tribes goes forth upon the fighting trail, even against the Ho-don, it must leave behind sufficient warriors to protect its women and its children from the neighbors upon either hand.

    Tarzan the Terrible Edgar Rice Burroughs 1912

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