↓
 

Streetplay Discussion Archive

Kicking it 1999 style

  • Home
    • Discussion Archive Home (this site)
    • Streetplay Discussion Group on Facebook
    • Streetplay.com
    • Streetplay on Facebook
    • Streetplay on Twitter
  • Locales
    • Boston
    • Bronx
    • Brooklyn
    • Chicago
    • International
    • Manhattan
    • Philadelphia
    • Queens
    • Staten Island
  • Spaldeen games
    • Ace King Queen
    • Box Baseball
    • Boxball
    • Curbball
    • Halfball
    • Other Spaldeen games
    • Punchball
    • Stickball
      • Stickball rules
    • Stoopball
    • Wallball / Off the Wall/Point
  • Girl games
    • Clap and Rhyme
    • Hopscotch
    • Jacks
    • Jumprope
  • Other Games
    • Bocce etc.
    • Card Games
    • Cricket
    • Hide & Seek
    • Hit the penny / stick / etc.
    • Johnny on the Pony
    • Marbles
    • Ringoleavio
    • Skully
    • Tag
  • Special topics
    • 1999 Stickball Classic
    • All Seasons
    • Member spotlight
    • Reader Stories
    • Young romance
  • Stickball
    • Stickball rules
  • Street Lifestyle
    • Bikes
    • Food & Drink
    • Hanging Out
    • Playgrounds
    • Roller skates
    • Street Fashion
    • Toys
      • Hula hoops & pogo sticks
Home→Categories Girl games→Clap and Rhyme - Page 36 << 1 2 … 34 35 36 37 38 … 50 51 >>

Category Archives: Clap and Rhyme

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Okay… does anyone remember……

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 22, 2000 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 19, 2014
Original author: Anonymous
 

Okay… does anyone remember… Fried Ham, Fried Ham Cheese and Bologna, and after the macaroni, we’ll have HOT DOGS… and more Fried Ham, Fried Ham, Fried Ham..

Posted in Clap and Rhyme, Girl games, Jumprope | Tagged Does anyone remember...

I loved “Long Legged Man”……

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 22, 2000 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
Original author: Anonymous
 

I loved “Long Legged Man”… one of my favorites!

Posted in Clap and Rhyme, Girl games, Jumprope

Check out this site and you…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 18, 2000 by Streetplay DiscussionsApril 18, 2000
Original author: Sallyrun
 

Check out this site and you can hear the whole original chewing gum song in all its glory! http://comedyradio.net/act/demento/donegan.lonnie-does.chewing.gum.html

Posted in Clap and Rhyme, Girl games

Lettuce! The missing word…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 13, 2000 by Streetplay DiscussionsApril 13, 2000
Original author: CasalsK
 

Lettuce! The missing word is lettuce! Come to think of it, our version was a bit different: Fried ham fried ham cheese and baloney After the pumpernickel, we’ll have more fun pickles and lettuce and we’ll have more fried ham Fried ham! Fried ham!

Posted in Clap and Rhyme, Girl games

I remember making them with…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 13, 2000 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 14, 2014
Original author: CasalsK
 

I remember making them with loose-leaf paper. So there were some extra steps to make the paper square. We would even go as far as to tear off the part of the loose-leaf with the holes first. But that complicated things and made it harder to get a nice square piece as an end product. And yes, we wasted lots of paper as well. 🙂 Lay the loose-leaf paper lengthwise. Take the right-bottom corner and bring it up to the top edge of the paper. Crease the paper well. Now you’re left with a small rectangular piece that you can now crease and tear off. Scissors, ha! Who needed scissors?! You’ll now be left with a peice of paper folded into a right triangle. The 90 degree angle should be to the left. Unfold. Now fold the bottom left corner up to the top right. Crease well. Unfold. You should now have a square piece of paper with creases in the form of an X. Fold all four corners to the center of the X. Turn the paper over so that the smooth, unfolded side is up. Fold all four corners of this “smooth” side toward the center. This is when I would pull out my pen and start writing. If you followed the above step precisely, you should have a square piece of paper with four triangular flaps. Each flap is “split” down the middle. Not literally split, thus the quotes, but the previous folding leaves the triangle “split” into two smaller triangles. You’ll see it when you do it. 🙂 Each smaller triangle gets it’s own number…1-8. Then lift up each flap, draw a line down the middle of it and write your fortunes within the two smaller triangles. Close up all the flaps and turn the paper over. Now the square flaps should be facing you. On each flap, write a color name. Red, Yellow, Blue, and Green. Crease the paper again, half and then half again, following the lay of the square flaps and so that the triangular flaps are on the inside, square flaps on the outside. (This part is hard to verbalize but when you do it I think you’ll see what I mean). Now you’ve got your Paper Fortune Teller! I don’t remember a rhyme… all I remember is being asked to choose a color. The color chosen would be spelled out, each letter prompting the opening and closing of the Fortune Teller. When it stopped, you’d see the numbers inside. This is how we did it: “Pick a color.” “Yellow.” “Y-E-L-L-O-W” “Pick a number.” “3” “1, 2, 3” “Pick another number” “7” Then you’d open up the flap that had the #7 written on it and read it’s corresponding fortune. I don’t know about anyone else, but the more we used the Fortune Teller the more times we would ask, or be asked, to pick a number. That would help keep it fresh a little bit longer. 🙂 But it would inevitably go stale and you’d have to make another one. If you had enough foresight to do it in pencil, then all you’d have to do is erase the old fortunes and write new ones. But those 4 color pens were more fun. 🙂 And girls being girls, you always have to include some kind of mention of how many children you would have when you grew up. It was almost an unwritten rule of Paper Fortune Teller making. 🙂

Posted in Clap and Rhyme, Girl games, Other Games | Tagged Paper "fortune teller"

More from the UK Ip…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 7, 2000 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
Original author: Anonymous
 

More from the UK Ip a dip a dation my operation How many people at the station (That’s a counting out rhyme and I can’t remember any more.) Ip dip sky blue who’s it not you (there’s more I can’t remember)

Posted in Clap and Rhyme, Girl games, Jumprope

I should add that I am posting…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 7, 2000 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
Original author: Anonymous
 

I should add that I am posting from the UK and learned most of these rhymes in Sussex/Surrey. xxxxxxx

Posted in Clap and Rhyme, Girl games, Jumprope

Sorry, that should have…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 7, 2000 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
Original author: Anonymous
 

Sorry, that should have been ‘not for adult consumption, being too RUDE.’ And that should be ‘sweet sweet baby, wouldn’t want to lose you NOW’ xxxxx

Posted in Clap and Rhyme, Girl games, Jumprope

Down by the banks with the…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 3, 2000 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
Original author: Yvonne [e-mail]
 

Down by the banks with the hanky panky where the bullfrogs jumped from bank to banky with a epe, ipe, op, ahp scrump-diddly-diddly and a ker-plunk Another one I know is bubble-gum, bubble-gum, in a dish, how many pieces do you wish? (# of pieces) 1, 2, 3….until the amount lands on a hand and that hand is out

Posted in Clap and Rhyme, Girl games, Jumprope

I am looking for the 10…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 1, 2000 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 17, 2014
Original author: Jeannie [e-mail]
 

I am looking for the 10 Steps to “Russian 10”. Anyone out there have the answer? Please e-mail me if you do.

Posted in Clap and Rhyme, Girl games, Jumprope, Other Spaldeen games, Spaldeen games | Tagged Russian 7/10/12 (the game)

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Categories

  • Girl games (1,201)
    • Clap and Rhyme (504)
    • Hopscotch (82)
    • Jacks (96)
    • Jumprope (264)
  • Locales (1,369)
    • Boston (14)
    • Bronx (325)
    • Brooklyn (553)
    • Chicago (23)
    • International (13)
    • Manhattan (159)
    • Philadelphia (135)
    • Queens (220)
    • Staten Island (9)
  • Other Games (913)
    • Bocce etc. (14)
    • Card Games (27)
    • Cricket (9)
    • Hide & Seek (22)
    • Hit the penny / stick / etc. (21)
    • Johnny on the Pony (99)
    • Marbles (70)
    • Ringoleavio (49)
    • Skully (339)
    • Tag (16)
  • Site suggestions (48)
  • Spaldeen games (996)
    • Ace King Queen (94)
    • Box Baseball (21)
    • Boxball (90)
    • Curbball (16)
    • Halfball (46)
    • Other Spaldeen games (534)
    • Punchball (95)
    • Stickball (546)
      • Stickball rules (31)
    • Stoopball (101)
    • Wallball / Off the Wall/Point (65)
  • Special topics (542)
    • 1999 Stickball Classic (46)
    • All Seasons (37)
    • Member spotlight (12)
    • Reader Stories (319)
    • Young romance (97)
  • Street Lifestyle (578)
    • Bikes (35)
    • Food & Drink (159)
    • Hanging Out (61)
    • Playgrounds (59)
    • Roller skates (33)
    • Street Fashion (36)
    • Toys (174)
      • Hula hoops & pogo sticks (24)

Tags

"A My Name Is Alice..." "Miss Lucy..." "The Projects" 9/11 1999 Back to Brooklyn Festival Astoria candy store Chinese handball Chinese jumprope collecting stuff Coney Island content suggestions crayons Does anyone remember... dolls & cutouts first kiss Girl / Boy / Cub Scouts Harlem I grew up... Lower East Side Off the Wall Pennsy Pinkie pimple ball pizza potsy running around Russian 7/10/12 (the game) salugi slugs (the game) songs South Bronx South Philadelphia spaldeen types Steve Mercado stoop sitting Streetplay business goals suburbia Summer tongue twisters tops and yo-yos wallball Washington Heights weapons of choice word games young love locations

Archives

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
©2025 - Streetplay Discussion Archive - Weaver Xtreme Theme
↑