{previous responder said, "Yes"]} .. This replay is a very vague answer because both William Clark and Meriweather Lewis were on the Voyage of Discovery, along with 31 other people. So WHOM said this?ACTUALLY no one SAID it. William Clark wrote later in his Journal entry, "Ocian in view! O! the joy,".However, he did not actually 'see' the Pacific Ocean. The cliff-side view he looked upon was looking over an estuary some 20 miles east yet, of the Pacific Ocean.
William Clark, of the explorer duo Lewis and Clark, thought that they had reached their goal, the Pacific Ocean, on November 7, 1805. He wrote in his journal "Ocian in view! O! the Joy!" (misspelled). But he soon learned that what he saw was not the Pacific: it was the wide estuary of the Columbia River, some 20 miles from the ocean itself. Storms then kept them from making it to the actual shore for almost 3 weeks. The failure of any relief ships to arrive meant they spent the winter of 1805-1806 there, near what is now Astoria, Oregon.
Oh Joy - 2009 was released on: USA: June 2009
The cast of Oh Joy - 2009 includes: Paul Rust as Danny Martin Starr
cow man
the ocean
It doesn't "mean" anything. It's just an expression of excitement.
The MacDonald Brothers.... Oh Joy!
Oh joy
God rest ye merry Gentlemen.
Oh, my. No, it isn't. It gets zero hits in all of Google. But it ought to be. It's perfectly lovely from a linguistic point of view. What might it be thought to mean?
Hollandia View, OH.