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  2. Who stole the cookie from the cookie jar? - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Who_stole_the_cookie_from...

    In the Wee Sing video "Grandpa's Magical Toys", while the children and toys are taking a brief break, they discover the cookies missing from the cookie jar and launch into the song, only for the cookie jar to point out at the end of the song that nobody took the cookies because they all ate them the day before.

  3. Quaker meeting (game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quaker_meeting_(game)

    Quaker Meeting, also known as Quaker's meeting or Cracker's Meeting (in the American South), is a child's game which is initiated with a rhyme and becomes a sort of quiet game where the participants may not speak, laugh, or smile, while the player in charge of the "meeting" may act like a comedian in an attempt to elicit one of the forbidden responses, and so get the participant who broke the ...

  4. Pat-a-cake, pat-a-cake, baker's man - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat-a-cake,_pat-a-cake...

    The earliest recorded version of the rhyme appears in Thomas D'Urfey's play The Campaigners from 1698, where a nurse says to her charges: ...and pat a cake Bakers man, so I will master as I can, and prick it, and prick it, and prick it, and prick it, and prick it, and throw't into the Oven.

  5. Cookie Jar (short story) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cookie_Jar_(short_story)

    Rhett and Jack begin eating cookies every night to remember their mother, realizing after several days that the jar is inexplicably still full of fresh cookies. On one occasion, Rhett begins trying to empty the cookie jar, but gives up when it begins to refill; while replacing cookies in the jar, he notices that his watch stops when inside the jar.

  6. Tommy Thumb's Pretty Song Book - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tommy_Thumb's_Pretty_Song_Book

    Although Tommy Thumb's Song Book is an older collection, no copies of its first printing have survived. The only other printed copies of nursery rhymes that predate the Pretty Song-Book are in the form of quotations and allusions, such as the half-dozen or so that appear in Henry Carey 's 1725 satire on Ambrose Philips , Namby Pamby .

  7. If You Give a Mouse a Cookie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/If_You_Give_a_Mouse_a_Cookie

    From If You Give a Mouse a Cookie. The entire story is told in second person.A boy gives a cookie to a mouse. The mouse asks for a glass of milk. He then requests a straw (to drink the milk), a napkin and then a mirror (to avoid a milk mustache), nail scissors (to trim his hair in the mirror), and a broom (to sweep up his hair trimmings).

  8. Jack Sprat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Sprat

    Like many nursery rhymes, "Jack Sprat" may have originated as a satire on a public figure. History writer Linda Alchin suggests that Jack was King Charles I, who was left "lean" when parliament denied him taxation, but with his queen Henrietta Maria he was free to "lick the platter clean" after he dissolved parliament—Charles was a notably short man.

  9. Briggflatts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Briggflatts

    The rhyme scheme also changes throughout the poem as the bulk of the text appears in free verse while other lines do contain rhyming patterns. The poem is noted for its use of sound. [ 5 ] Bunting believed that the essential element of poetry is the sound, and that if the sound is right, the listener will hear, enjoy and be moved; and that ...