Which preposition to use with jubilation

of Occurrences 6%

the sea!" which has echoed through succeeding ages as one of the great historic jubilations of humanity.

at Occurrences 2%

The rage of the people, their unbounded jubilation at the deliverance of their Saint Helena from the jaws of death on the very scaffold, were too recent to be trifled with by a prince sitting so insecure in his ducal seat as Otho of the Wolfmark.

in Occurrences 1%

But here is jubilation in the air And matter made to build the jocund rhyme on, Though in our joyance some may fail to share, Like Mr. RUNCIMAN or Major SIMON, That hardened warrior, he Who won the Military O.B.E. Already dawns for us a golden age (Lo! with the loud "All Clear!"

like Occurrences 1%

When I assured them that there was no more question of their decapitation than of mine, and that they were perfectly safe, they broke into a discordant jubilation like that of a children's school let loose; life had nothing more to give them.

on Occurrences 1%

When it was announced that we were to be paid off and that the gulls and porpoises that help to make the Dogger Bank the really jolly place it is would know us no more, there was, I admit, a certain amount of subdued jubilation on board.

over Occurrences 1%

They are only a cry of jubilation over the degradation of the heathen Arabs by the triumph of Allah's weapons.

throughout Occurrences 1%

The crew of Z6 were the recipients of a tremendous ovation on their return, while the news of this dastardly murder was received with jubilation throughout the German Empire.

as Occurrences 1%

Long before daylight, the news came by cable, the sirens and factory whistles were thrown wide open, and the whole population of the United States, men, women and children, roused out of bed, swarmed the streets and highways, and gave themselves over to such a jubilation as no country ever before had seennor any previous day in the story of the human race had called for.

with Occurrences 1%

Music, banners, salutes, fireworks, addresses, ovation, and jubilation with enthusiasm genuine and simulated, came and went in almost uninterrupted sequence; so much of the noise and pomp of electioneering had not been seen since the famous hard-cider campaign of Harrison.

during Occurrences 1%

The great jubilation during the latter half of the nineteenth centuryfrom 1851 onwardsover world-wide trade and Industrial Exhibitions, as the heralds of the world's peace and amitya jubilation voiced in Tennyson's earlier Locksley Hallwas to a certain extent justified.

Which preposition to use with  jubilation