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Integrity Toys Legendary Convention 2020 Arrivals! Finally! There are no words for Nadja's beauty in this shot.
"If Candlemas Day be fair and bright, winter will have another fight. If Candlemas Day brings cloud and rain, winter won't come again”
33/365/2025
A great spangled fritillary bringing you a little sunshine on a dreary winter day. I love how the orange of the flower is reflected in the white spots of its wing.
My entry to the The Brothers Brick "Create-a-Calendar" Contest; the barely Christmas-y Animals in Locations that Rhyme Calendar.
It took much longer than it should have and a couple of the ones I've come up with are a bit strenuous: a lot of the animals LEGO make don't rhyme very well. I won't list them the ones above, see if you can guess.
Some rejected ideas;
Chimp in a blimp - wrong scale,
Bear at the Fair - too big
an English language nursery rhyme and fingerplay. It has a Roud Folk Song Index number of 16401.
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Modern versions of the rhyme include:
Two little dickie birds sitting on a wall.
One named Peter, one named Paul.
Fly away, Peter! Fly away, Paul!
Come back, Peter! Come back, Paul!
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The rhyme was first recorded when published in Mother Goose's Melody in London around 1765. In this version the names of the birds were Jack and Gill:
There were two blackbirds
Sat upon a hill,
The one was nam'd Jack,
The other nam'd Gill;
Fly away Jack,
Fly away Gill,
Come again Jack,
Come again Gill.
These names seem to have been replaced with the apostles Peter and Paul in the 19th century
MACRO MONDAYS: NOVEMBER 20
THEME: RHYMES WITH "STONE"
I have no idea why I am keeping this! I have 2 that are even older. At least the rotary phone has been gone a long time!
Knochen aus der Rinderbeinscheibe.
Ich hatte eine leckere Suppe.
Bone of a shin slice.
I had a tasty soup.
IMG_5901 2024 12 14 file
rhymes with "awesome"
Street color - Oklahoma City
***Note: Clarity/Contrast/Brightness edits in Flickr Photo Editor
There is a family has a girl
and MARIKO is her name o
M-A-R-I-KO
M-A-R-I-KO
M-A-R-I-KO
and MARIKO is her name o :P
All Stuff from Arcade in Sep.
*Bear : :*BoOgErS*:
*Sofa : tres-blah
*Ballons : anc
Macro Mondays - Stone Rhyming Zone
The answer to the title question is Aye (eye, I) or Yes!
Homophone rhymes with Stone, so I thought I would expand on the word games a bit.
A Homophone is defined as each of two or more words having the same pronunciation but different meanings, origins, or spelling, e.g., new and knew.
Wood (would) Allowed (aloud) me To (two, too) Use (ewes) Him (hymn) To (two, too) help You (ewe, yew) See (sea) homophones, But (butt) only For (fore, four) a Time (thyme). Here are some of the Homophones pictured, but you may be able to pick out more.
Eye (aye, I)
Fur (fir)
Grays/Greys (graze)
Hair (hare)
One (won)
Wood (would) - I often call Woody Wood for short
Happy Macro Monday!