The lawn spread freely onward, as of old, over which, in sweet company, he had once gambolled.
1907: Paul Lafargue, The rights of the horse, page 160
[…] she remains near him to suckle him and teach him to choose the delicious grasses of the meadow, in which he gambols until he is grown.
1944: George Orwell, Animal Farm, page 15
In the ecstasy of that thought they gambolled round and round, they hurled themselves into great leaps of excitement.
1949: George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four, page 22
It was somehow slightly frightening, like the gambolling of tiger cubs which will soon grow up into man-eaters.
1995: Neal Stephenson, The Diamond Age: or a Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer, page 286 →ISBN
Three girls moved across the billiard-table lawn of a great manor house, circling and swarming about a common center of gravity like gamboling sparrows.
Noun
1843: Edgar Allen Poe, The Gold Bug, page 10
When his gambols were over, I looked at the paper, and, to speak the truth, found myself not a little puzzled at what my friend had depicted.