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The Oggy Oggy Oggy chant (alternatively spelt Oggie Oggie Oggie or Ogi Ogi Ogi), and its variations, are often heard at sporting events, political rallies and around numerous Scout and Guide campfires, primarily in Britain and some Commonwealth nations. One group will shout Oggy three times, while another will respond with Oi! three times.
Members of the British Royal Navy claim to have used the Oggy Oggy Oggy chant, or a version of it, since the Second World War. [2] Englishman Ron Knox claims to have used the "Oggy" chant while playing for the Box Hill Rugby Club in Melbourne in the late 1960s. Various conflicting stories of how it was introduced from Britain to Australia can ...
Tiếng gọi thanh niên, or Thanh niên hành khúc (Saigon: [tʰan niəŋ hân xúk], "March of the Youths"), and originally the March of the Students (Vietnamese: Sinh Viên Hành Khúc, French: La Marche des Étudiants), is a famous song of the Vietnamese musician Lưu Hữu Phước.
Oggy is a cat with a light blue body, green eyes, red nose, grey tummy and white feet. Oggy also has a black "cap" (shaped to include his ears) over the top of his head. Oggy usually spends his time either watching TV or doing housework, when he's not chasing the cockroaches.
Oggy, Ogie or Oggie may refer to: Cornish pasty, also called oggy or oggie in the Westcountry of England; Ogie Alcasid (born 1967), Filipino singer-songwriter; Ogie Diaz (born 1970), Filipino actor and comedian; Oggy and the Cockroaches, a franchise and the name of a long-running popular animated slapstick series
Oggy Oggy is a French preschool computer-animated television series created by Jean Cayrol and Cédric Guarneri, and produced by Xilam with the participation of France Televisions. It is a spin-off to Oggy and the Cockroaches , based on the character by Jean-Yves Raimbaud and billed as the first French Netflix Original, in terms of animated ...
One possible theory for the origin of the chant stems from Cornwall. An Oggy is a slang term for a Cornish pasty and the tin miner's wives would shout "Oggy Oggy Oggy" when delivering pasties to their husbands. In the 1970s the Welsh folk singer and commedian Max Boyce popularised the chant in order to excite the crowd at his concerts.
Oggy gets a box of cherry-chocolates delivered to his home and goes inside to enjoy them. However, the roaches – Joey, Marky and Dee Dee – have decided to take the sweets for themselves, and a chase begins throughout the house. Jack nurses Oggy and vows to get back the box of sweets, even if it involves blowing up the house.