Jump-rope rhyme
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A jump-rope rhyme, or skipping-rope rhyme, is a rhyme chanted by children while jumping rope. Such rhymes have been recorded in all cultures where jump rope is played. Examples of English-language rhymes have been found going back to at least the 17th century. Like most folklore, jump-rope rhymes tend be found in many different variations.
Some rhymes are intended to count the number of jumps the skipper takes without stumbling. These rhymes can take very simple forms, such as this chant collected in London in the 1950s:
- Big Ben strikes one,
- Big Ben strikes two,
- Big Ben strikes three,
- (etc.)
- Cinderella
- Dressed in yella
- Went downstairs to kiss her fella.
- She made a mistake
- And kissed a snake.
- How many doctors will it take?
- 1! 2! 3! 4! (etc.)
- Cinderella
- Dressed in yella
- Went to meet her handsome fella.
- On the way her undies busted
- How many people were disgusted?
- 1! 2! 3! 4! (etc.)
- Fudge, fudge, call the judge,
- Mama had a baby.
- Wrap it up in tissue paper,
- Stick it in the elevator.
- Mama called the doctor,
- The doctor called the nurse,
- The nurse called the lady with the alligator purse.
- 'Mumps' said the doctor,
- 'Mumps,' said the nurse,
- 'Mumps' said the lady with the alligator purse.
- Three, six, nine
- The goose drank wine
- The monkey chewed tobacco on the telephone line
- The line, it broke
- The goose got choked
- And they all went to heaven in a small rowboat
- Lizzie Borden took an axe
- And gave her mother forty whacks,
- When she saw what she had done,
- She gave her father forty-one.
- I had alittle bird, it's name was Enza.
- I opened the window and..
- In-Flew-Enza.
See also
Sources
- Opie, Peter and Iona. The Lore and Language of Schoolchildren. Oxford University Press, 1959.
External links
- [Jump-Rope Rhymes] from gameskidsplay.net.
- [Chants, Clapping Games, and Jump Rope Rhymes]
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