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  2. Dessin d'enfant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dessin_d'enfant

    The name of these embeddings is French for a "child's drawing"; its plural is either dessins d'enfant, "child's drawings", or dessins d'enfants, "children's drawings". A dessin d'enfant is a graph, with its vertices colored alternately black and white, embedded in an oriented surface that, in many cases, is simply a plane.

  3. Odds and evens (hand game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odds_and_evens_(hand_game)

    Odds and evens is a simple game of chance and hand game, involving two people simultaneously revealing a number of fingers and winning or losing depending on whether they are odd or even, or alternatively involving one person picking up coins or other small objects and hiding them in their closed hand, while another player guesses whether they have an odd or even number.

  4. Pinball Number Count - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinball_Number_Count

    This middle segment features a scene in which a number of contraptions move the pinball about the interior of the machine, sometimes employing Rube Goldberg–style mechanisms. Each scene begins with the ball following ramps and hitting some bumpers ; then various features belonging to a theme specific to the number, often including humanoid or ...

  5. Morra (game) - Wikipedia

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

    On the count of three, each player holds out any number of fingers less than n, including zero. The person whose number is the remainder of the sum is chosen. In this variant it is common to arrange all players in a circle, assign someone to be player zero and assign numbers to other players counting upwards in a direction (usually clockwise).

  6. Click, Clack, Splish, Splash - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Click,_Clack,_Splish,_Splash

    Click, Clack, Splish, Splash: A Counting Adventure is a children's picture book written by Doreen Cronin and is illustrated by Betsy Lewin. Released in 2006 by Atheneum Books , it is one of the sequels to Click, Clack, Moo: Cows That Type .

  7. Finger-counting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finger-counting

    Finger-counting can serve as a form of manual communication, particularly in marketplace trading – including hand signaling during open outcry in floor trading – and also in hand games, such as morra. Finger-counting is known to go back to ancient Egypt at least, and probably even further back. [Note 1]

  8. Childhood development of fine motor skills - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Childhood_development_of...

    Children's drawings also develop as a child ages and refines their fine motor skills. This has been widely studied, especially by Rhoda Kellogg (1898–1987), following children from 2 years to 8 years of age. Her research has found that the artistic gestures of children evolve from basic scribbles to consistent symbols.

  9. Knife game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knife_game

    Knife game being played, with white line representing the motion of the game. The knife game, pinfinger, nerve, bishop, hand roulette, five finger fillet (FFF), or chicken [citation needed] is a game wherein, placing the palm of one's hand down on a table with fingers apart, using a knife (such as a pocket or pen knife), or other sharp object, one attempt to stab back and forth between one's ...