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This image is a derivative work of the following images: File:Hopscotch1900F294.png licensed with PD-US . 2008-07-18T04:14:05Z ScotchHopper 241x473 (6790 Bytes) {{Information |Description={{en|1=Hopscotch court; P. 357: Fig 294.—A Typical American Court with Ten Subdivisions.}} |Source=''The Outdoor Handy Book: For the Playground, Field, and Forest''.
"Hopscotch to oblivion", Barcelona, Spain; an example of dark humor. A hopscotch court drawn such that the area where the final step would be is instead a sheer drop such as a building or cliff, such that any participant would fall to their death upon completion, is a motif occasionally seen in fiction, sometimes as a device for black comedy.
This image is a derivative work of the following images: File:Hopscotch1900F291.png licensed with PD-US . 2008-07-18T04:08:10Z ScotchHopper 225x464 (6695 Bytes) {{Information |Description={{en|1=Hopscotch court; P. 356: Fig 291.—An English Court with Eleven Subdivisions and a Plum Pudding.}} |Source=''The Outdoor Handy Book: For the Playground, Field, and Forest''.
Inglenook Sidings, created by Alan Wright (1928 - January 2005), is a model railway train shunting puzzle.It consists of a specific track layout, a set of initial conditions, a defined goal, and rules which must be obeyed while performing the shunting operations.
One magpie at the birth of Jesus, perhaps presaging sorrow for Mary: [3] Piero della Francesca's The Nativity Children's game hopscotch played in Lancashire, England with lyric close to the 1846 version of the rhyme
Timesaver is a well-known [1] model railroad switching puzzle (U.K. English: shunting puzzle) created by John Allen. [2] It consists of a specific track layout, a set of initial conditions, a defined goal, and rules which must be obeyed while performing the shunting operations.
[6] [7] Portrait mode is preferred for editing page layout work, in order to view the entire page of a screen at once without showing wasted space outside the borders of a page, and for script-writing, legal work (in drafting contracts etc.), and other applications where it is useful to see a maximum number of lines of text. It is also ...
The remaining cards form the stock and are placed facedown at the upper left of the layout. The four foundations (light rectangles in the upper right of the figure) are built up by suit from Ace (low in this game) to King, and the tableau piles can be built down by alternate colors. Every face-up card in a partial pile, or a complete pile, can ...