-
Childlore is the
folklore or folk
culture of
children and
young people. It includes, for example,
rhymes and
games pla**** in the
school playground. The...
- this
childlore, the
artifacts themselves have been in play for centuries.
Below is
listed just a
small sampling of
types and
examples of
childlore and...
- Surfer’s S, and the
Graffiti S, is a
graffiti sign in po****r
culture and
childlore that is
typically doodled on children's
notebooks or
graffitied on walls...
-
Latin American childlore, the
childlore of
Latin American countries, has
still not been
studied to the same
extent as that of
other countries. The study...
-
Cooties is a
fictitious childhood disease,
commonly represented as
childlore. It is used in the
United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and the...
- fighting. He
speculated that it was part of what
would now be
termed "the
childlore" of Okinawa.
Known as
tegumi in Naha, and mutō in
Tomari and Shuri, Okinawan...
-
activities from
government officials.[citation needed] A 1902
survey of
childlore by
psychologist G.
Stanley Hall in the
United States found that though...
- the day to
cause mayhem and destruction.
Bizarro World Freaky Friday Childlore List of self–referential
paradoxes Shelton,
Sandi Kahn (2001). Preschool...
- "bopping". The song has many
different variations and is
often p****ed on as
childlore.
Beverly Cleary's 1970 children's book
Runaway Ralph mentions "Little...
-
extended to
include not just oral epics, but latrinalia, many
forms of
childlore (skipping-rope rhymes, the
words of counting-out
games etc.), and limericks;...