Answer: OFT
OFT is a crossword puzzle answer that we have spotted 163 times.
    - Repeatedly
 
    - Frequently
 
    - Frequently, poetically
 
    - Many a time
 
    - Poetic adverb
 
    - Frequently, in poetry
 
    - Frequently, to Shakespeare
 
    - Commonly, once
 
    - Frequently, to Frost
 
    - Frequently, in verse
 
    - O'er and o'er
 
    - "___ in the Stilly Night" (Thomas Moore lyric)
 
    - Literary adverb
 
    - Thomas Moore poem "___ in the Stilly Night"
 
    - Habitually, for short
 
    - "So ___ have I invoked thee for my Muse": Shak.
 
    - Commonly
 
    - Frequently, to bards
 
    - "How ___ Has the Banshee Cried" (Thomas Moore poem)
 
    - Frequently, to a poet
 
    - "So ___ have I invoked thee ...": Shak.
 
    - Frequently, to Keats
 
    - Time and again
 
    - Frequently, in rhyme
 
    - Repeatedly, in rhyme
 
    - In many cases, to a poet
 
    - With regularity
 
    - Frequently, in poesy
 
    - Frequently, rarely
 
    - "___ in the Stilly Night" (Thomas Moore poem)
 
    - A lot, to a bard
 
    - O'er and o'er again
 
    - Many a time, to Tennyson
 
    - "How ___ is the candle of the wicked put out!": Job 21:17
 
    - Frequently, literarily
 
    - Many times o'er
 
    - "Thy friendship __ has made my heart to ache": Blake
 
    - "... the apparel __ proclaims the man": "Hamlet"
 
    - Bard's "frequently"
 
    - Many times, in verse
 
    - Frequently, in poems
 
    - ''For loan __ loses both itself and friend'': Shak.
 
    - Frequent, in rhyme
 
    - Poet's adverb
 
    - Frequently, to poets
 
    - It's frequently in verse
 
    - Frequently, for Frost
 
    - Consistently, in verse
 
    - Frequent, in poetry
 
    - Frequently, to Donne
 
    - Frequently, in old literature
 
    - "___ I had heard of Lucy Gray ...": Wordsworth
 
    - Poet's "frequently"
 
    - Frequently, to a bard
 
    - Many a time, poetically
 
    - With regularity, to Whitman
 
    - Poetic frequency
 
    - Frequently, in brief
 
    - Frequent, in verse
 
    - Many times, to Keats
 
    - Many times, briefly
 
    - Regularly, in poetry
 
    - "Thy friendship ___ has made my heart to ache": Blake
 
    - "... the apparel ___ proclaims the man": "Hamlet"
 
    - "For loan ___ loses both itself and friend": Shak.
 
    - A lot, in verse
 
    - All the time, long ago
 
    - Poet's word for frequently
 
    - Often, to Standish O'Grady
 
    - Frequently, to St. Francis of Assisi
 
    - Over and over
 
    - Frost's "The ___-Repeated Dream"
 
    - Repeatedly, quaintly
 
    - Far from seldom, to Shakespeare
 
    - "___ I had heard of Lucy Gray": Wordsworth
 
    - "Our remedies ___ in ourselves do lie": "All's Well That Ends Well"
 
    - Commonly, to Coleridge
 
    - Frequently, for short
 
    - Repeatedly, in verse
 
    - Many times, in poetry
 
    - Frequently, to Byron
 
    - More than occasionally, to a bard
 
    - Almost alway
 
    - Frequently, archaically
 
    - A lot, to Shakespeare
 
    - Repeatedly, in poems
 
    - Time and again, in verse
 
    - ___-times
 
    - "... apparel ___ proclaims the man": "Hamlet"
 
    - More than sometimes, in poetry
 
    - Often, poetically
 
    - Repeatedly, in 31-Acrosses
 
    - -times
 
    - Frequently, to Shelley
 
    - Many a time, in verse
 
    - Repeatedly, to a bard
 
    - Recurrently 
 
    - Frequently, quaintly
 
    - Many times, poetically
 
    - Frequently, to Browning and others
 
    - Once-common "commonly"
 
    - Frequently, in sonnets
 
    - Frequent, in odes
 
    - Time and again, to a poet
 
    - Time and again, to Whitman
 
    - Frequently in verse
 
    - "Jesters do ___ prove prophets": "King Lear"
 
    - With regularity, poetically
 
    - ___-told
 
    - Many a time, in poetry
 
    - Frequent, to a poet
 
    - More than once in a while
 
    - ___-repeated
 
    - Time and again, to a bard
 
    - Frequently in a poem
 
    - Much, before a hyphen
 
    - Many times, old-style
 
    - Frequent, in old poetry
 
    - Again and again, to bards
 
    - "Our remedies ___ in ourselves do lie": Shak.
 
    - Frequently, old-style
 
    - Frequently, in old poetry
 
    - ___-mentioned
 
    - Old-style "frequently"
 
    - Frequently, once
 
    - Frequently once
 
    - ___-quoted
 
    - "The good is ___ interred with their bones": Antony
 
    - Quite a bit, in verse
 
    - Unseldom
 
    - Many times, in poems
 
    - Happening a lot, cut
 
    - It's common in poetry
 
    - Not quite e'er
 
    - All the time, in odes
 
    - Much, hyphened
 
    - A lot of old poems
 
    - Shakespearean "frequently"
 
    - "The good is ___ interred with their bones": "Julius Caesar"
 
    - A lot of times, to poets
 
    - What's frequently found in poetry?
 
    - ___- quoted
 
    - ___-forgotten
 
    - Frequently found in poetry?
 
    - Time and again, to Yeats
 
    - Habitually, poetically
 
    - Not seldom, poetically
 
    - "For the apparel ___ proclaims the man": Polonius
 
    - Again and again, in verse
 
    - A lot, to Aden
 
    - Poet's "many times"
 
    - Frequently found in a sonnet?
 
    - With frequency
 
    - Way more than ne'er
 
    - An ___-cited study
 
    - Far from ne'er
 
    - Over and again, in poetry
 
    - "Here hung those lips that I have kiss'd I know not how ___": Hamlet
 
    - E'er so frequently
 
    - Hardly ne'er
 
    - Poet's "many, many times"
 
    - Much more than ne'er
 
    - Frequently found in poems?