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I Can Show You the Ropes Wanna Be Your Baby

We've put together a huge collection of new and traditional bound songs, rhymes and chants that help continue the cadence while skipping rope. Enjoy these double dutch jump rope songs with your friends and fellow jumpers!
( Take a rhyme that's not on this listing? Use the discussion feature at the lesser of this folio and we'll add together it!)

Related:Double Dutch Bound Ropes


Banana, Assistant, Banana Separate

Banana, banana, assistant split,
What did you become in arithmetic?
Banana, assistant, banana for free,
What did you get in geometry?


Birdie, Birdie in the Sky

Baboon, birdie in the sky,
Why'd ya do that in my eye?
Baboon, baboon in the sky,
Gee, I'1000 glad that cows don't fly.


I Know Something

I know something,
But I won't tell.
Iii footling monkeys,
in a peanut trounce.
One can read,
And one can dance,
And one has a hole,
in the seat of his pants!


Lemon Lime

Lemon Lime
On time
Singing 1, 2 (jumper hops out)
three, 4, (second jumper jumps just 2x & then hops out etc.)
5, 6,


V Little Monkeys

Five trivial monkeys,
Jumping on the bed.
One roughshod off,
And bumped his caput
Mama called the doctor,
And the doctor said:
"No more monkeys
jumping on the bed!"


Had a Trivial Sportscar

Had a little sportscar 248 Took it circular the coooooooooooorrr (jumper hops out of the turning rope, runs around the corner & jumps back in)
Ner & slammed information technology on the brakes (jump rope turners stop turning)
Bumped into a lady, bumped into a human
Bumped into a policeman, human oh human being
Policeman caught me
Put me in jail
All I had was ginger ale
Red, hot, chili pepper (rope turners plow faster & faster until jumper misses a jump)


I Had a Lilliputian Puppy

I had a niggling puppy.
His name was Tiny Tim.
I put him in the bathtub,
To see if he could swim.
He drank upwards all the h2o.
He ate a bar of lather.
The next thing y'all know,
He had a bubble in his throat.
In came the doctor
(person jumps in).
In came the nurse
( person jumps in).
In came the lady
With the alligator purse
(person jumps in).
Out went the doc
(person jumps out).
Out went the nurse
(person jumps out).
Out went the lady
With the alligator purse
(person jumps out).


A, B, C and Vegetable Soup

A, B, C and vegetable goop.
What will I notice in my alphabet soup?
A, B, C. . . . . . . .
(When you miss, make up something that starts with the letter of the alphabet y'all missed on.)

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Instructor


A My Name Is

A my proper name is Alice
And my husband's proper noun is Arthur,
Nosotros come from Alabama,
Where we sell artichokes.
B my name is Barney
And my wife's name is Bridget,
We come from Brooklyn,
Where we sell bicycles.
C my name is _________
And my hubby's name is ___________
We come from __________
Where nosotros sell ___________.
(Go along throughout the alphabet)

~Ellen Stonemason, AACS Music Teacher


All in Together Girls

All in together, girls.
How do you similar the weather condition, girls?
January, Feb, March, April . . .

~Caitlin Pollard, 2nd Grade, & Adele Greil


Anthy Maria Jumped in the Fire

Anthy Maria jumped in the fire.
The burn down too hot, she jumped in the pot.
The pot was likewise black, she jumped in a cleft.
The pot was soon over, she jumped in some clover.
Clover's too sweetness; she kicked up her feet.
Anxiety was soon over, she cried 1, 2, 3,
Jumped in a tree.
The tree was so high she couldn't become college.
'Long came a breeze, blew her away.

~Marilyn Sloan, Alfred, NY


Flat for Rent

Apartment for rent, inquire within,
When _________ moves out, allow ___________ in.

~Ellen Stonemason, AACS Music Instructor


Apples, Peaches, Pears and Plums

Apples, peaches, pears, and plums
Tell me when your birthday comes.

~Caitlin Pollard, 2nd Course


My Grandpa's Subcontract

As I went down to my grandad's farm.
A Baton goat chased me around the befouled.
It chased me up a sycamore tree,
And this is what it said to me:
I similar coffee, I like tea,
I like _________ to bound with me.

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher


Benjamin Franklin Went to France

Benjamin Franklin went to France
To teach the ladies how to dance.
Beginning the heel, so the toe,
Spin around and out y'all go.

~Adele Greil


Blackbirds, Blackbirds

Blackbirds, blackbirds,
Sitting on a wire.
What practice you do at that place?
May we enquire?
ÒWe just sit to see the solar day,
So nosotros flock and fly away.
By i, two, 3. . . . .

~Ellen Bricklayer, AACS Music Instructor


Bluebells, Cockle Shells

Bluebells, crinkle shells,
Eevie, ivy, over;
I like coffee, I like tea;
I like the boys, and the boys like me.
Tell your mother to hold her tongue;
She had a fellow when she was young.
Tell your father to practice the same;
He had a girl and he changed her name.
Bluebells, crinkle shells,
Eevie, ivy, over;
Female parent went to marketplace
To buy some meat;
Baby's in the cradle
Fast asleep.
The old clock on the mantel says
One o'clock, ii o'clock..
(to twelve o'clock)

~Kim Donius, AACS Librarian


Bubble Gum, Bubble Gum

Bubble gum, bubble gum
Penny a packet,
Commencement you chew it,
And so you scissure it,
Then yous stick it
In your jacket,
Then your parents
Boot upwardly a racket.
Chimera gum, chimera glue, Penny a parcel.

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher


Bubble Glue, Bubble Glue (v2)

Bubble gum, chimera gum, chew and accident,
Bubble gum, chimera gum, scrape your toe,
Chimera gum, chimera gum, tastes so sweet,
Get that bubble mucilage off your anxiety!

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher


Butterfly, Butterfly

Butterfly, Butterfly, throws a buss, buss, osculation,
Butterfly, Butterfly, become out before you miss, miss, miss.

~Marilyn Sloan, Alfred, NY


Calling in, Calling out

Calling in, calling out,
_________ runs in when I run out!

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher


Charlie Chaplin Went to French republic

Charlie Chaplin went to France,
To teach the ladies the hula dance.
Start on the heels,
Then on the toes,
Around and around and effectually yous get.
Salute to the Helm,
Bow to the Queen,
Impact the lesser of the submarine.

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher


Chimacum, Cheetahs

Chimacum Cheetahs, turn around,
Chimacum Cheetahs, touch the ground,
Chimacum Cheetahs, show your spots,
Chimacum Cheetahs, hot, hot, hot!

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher


Christopher Columbus

Christopher Columbus
Sailed the bounding main blue
In 14 hundred
And ninety-two.

~Marilyn Sloan, Alfred, NY


Chocolate Bears

Chocolate bears and gingerbread cats,
All dressed upward in whipped-cream hats.
Danced in the garden nether the moon,
Shell sweet rhythms with a wooden spoon,
Whirling, turning, jumping to the beat,
Melting down to their ice cream anxiety.

When the bakery ran to see,
They ran beneath the gum-mucilage tree,
Running in between the rows,
Tripping over ice cream toes.
At that place were one, ii, 3 . . .

~Ellen Bricklayer, AACS Music Instructor


Cinderalla Dressed in Yella

Cinderella dressed in yella,
Went downstairs to kiss a fella,
Made a fault and kissed a snake.
How many doctors did it accept
1, 2, 3, . . . .

Cinderella dressed in xanthous
Went downstairs to kiss her young man.
How many kisses did she give?
I, two, 3, four, five . . .

~Adele Greil


Cookies, Candies in a Dish

Cookies, candy in the dish;
How many pieces do you wish?
i, 2, 3, 4, . . . . .

~Mrs. Harris, AACS Art Teacher


Dolly Dimple Walks Similar This

Dolly Dimple walks like this,
Dolly Dimple talks like this,
Dolly Dimple smiles like this,
Dolly Dimple throws a kiss.

~Adele Greil


Down in the Alley

Down in the alley where the garbage grows,
A flea jumped on an elephant's toes,
The elephant cried with tears in his optics,
Why don't you pick on someone your size?

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher


Down in the Valley

Down in the valley
Where the dark-green grass grows
Saturday little Annie
Every bit sweet as a rose.
Along came a boy
And kissed her on the cheek.
Why, Annie, you ought to exist ashamed!
Got a little boyfriend
And you don't know his name!
What is his name?
A, B, C ...

~Kim Donius, AACS Librarian


Down in the Valley (v2)

Down in the valley where the dark-green grass grows,
There sat __________ as pretty every bit a rose.
She sang and so loftier, she sang and so sugariness,
Along came ________ and kissed her on the cheek.
How many kisses did she get?
1, ii, 3 . . . . .

~Trisha Kuenzie, 2nd class


Down by the Riverside

Down past the riverside the green grass grows,
Where someone walks, some tiptoe.
She sings, she sings and then sweet,
She calls over to someone beyond the street.
Tea cakes, pancakes, everything you see,
Meet me at the park at half by three.

~Mrs. Ordway, AACS 1st Grade Teacher


Early in the Morn

Early on in the morning, nearly eight o'clock,
What should I hear but the postman's knock.
Upwardly jumps ____________ to open the door,
How many letters did she find on the floor?
A, B, C, D . . . . .

~Ellen Stonemason, AACS Music Teacher


Grace, Grace Dressed in Lace

Grace, Grace dressed in lace.
Went upstairs to powder her face up.
How many boxes did information technology take?
1, 2, 3 . . . . .

~Ashley Kuenzie, 1st grade


Gypsy, Gypsy

Gypsy, gypsy
Please tell me.
What's my sweetheart going to be:
Physician, Lawyer, broker, thief,
Sailor, soldier, Indian Chief?

~Ellen Bricklayer, AACS Music Teacher


Hello, Howdy, Hello, sir

Hi, hi, hello, sir.
Meet me at the grocer.
No, sir. Why, sir?
Because I accept a cold, sir.
Where did you get the cold, sir?
At the N Pole, sir.
What were yous doing there, sir?
Counting polar bears, sir.
How many did you count, sir?
Ane, two, three, 4, five . . . .

~Adele Greil


Hither am I, Picayune Jumping Joan

Hither am I, piddling jumping Joan;
When nobody's with me
I'g always lonely.

~Kim Donius, AACS Librarian


Hickety Pickety Pop

Hickety Pickety Pop,
How many times earlier I end?
1, 2, three . . . .

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher


Mississippi

How do you spell Mississippi?
M (cantankerous arms over breast)
I (betoken to your eye)
Kleptomaniacal letter of the alphabet (cantankerous legs and bound)
Crooked letter (cross legs and jump)
I (betoken to eye)
Hunch back
Hunch dorsum
I!

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Instructor


xv Cents

I asked my parents for 15 cents,
To run across the platypus jump the argue.
She jumped so high she touched the heaven,
And didn't come up back till the Fourth of July.

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher


50 Cents

I asked my mother for fifty cents
To see the elephant spring the fence.
He jumped and then high he touched the sky,
And never came dorsum till the 4th of July
(Jump higher and higher)

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Instructor


I Tin can Do a Polka

I can do a polka, I tin practise a split,
I can do a tap dance, just similar this!
1, 2, 3 . . . .

~Ellen Stonemason, AACS Music Teacher


I Eat My Peas with Love

I swallow my peas with honey,
I've done it all my life.
It looks a fiddling funny.
But it keeps them on my knife.
How many peas can I get on my knife?
1, 2, 3, . . . . .

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher


I Had a Footling Brother

I had a niggling brother
And his proper name was Johnny.
He played in the meadow
where the frogs croaked funny.
He ran through the meadow
With a vocal on his natural language,
And he picked a few flowers
Merely for fun.
How many flowers did he find?
1, 2, 3 . . . .

~Ellen Stonemason, AACS Music Teacher


I Know a Male child

I know a male child and he is doubled-jointed,
He gave me a buss and I was disappointed.
He gave me another to friction match the other,
Now, now, ____________, IÕll tell your mother.
How many kisses did I get last night?
ane, 2, 3. . . . .

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Instructor


I Know a Piffling Lady

I know a little lady
But her proper noun is Miss.
She went around the corner
To buy some fish.
She met a little swain
And she gave him a kiss.
I know a little lady
Only her proper name is Miss.

~Marilyn Sloan, Alfred, NY


I LIke Coffee

I similar coffee,
I like tea.
I like ________ to spring with me.

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher


I LIke Coffee (v2)

I love coffee,
I beloved tea.
I love the boys
And the boys love me.

~Adele Greil


I Like Java (v3)

I similar coffee, I similar tea,
I like sitting on Bobby's knee.
Salute to the rex and bow to the queen,
And plow your back on the gypsy queen.

~Erin Pollard


I Made a Wish Jumping Rope

I fabricated a wish jumping rope,
I caught a fish jumping rope,
I gave a kiss jumping rope,
How many wishes (fishes, kisses) did I get?
1, ii, 3, . . . . .

~Ellen Stonemason, AACS Music Teacher


Ice Cream Soda

Water ice cream soda, lemonade, punch;
Spell the initials of my (your) honey agglomeration.
A-B-C-D . . . .

~Mrs. Harris, AACS Art Instructor & Ellen Bricklayer, AACS Music Teacher


If Bubble Mucilage is Complimentary

If bubble glue is free, free, free,
Please give some to me, me, me.
I am clever, not a dunce,
How many can I chew at one time?
Ane, 2, iii . . . .

~Erin Pollard


I'chiliad a Petty Dutch Girl

I'1000 a trivial Dutch girl
Dressed in bluish.
These are the things
I like to do:
Salute to the captain,
Curtsey to the queen,
Plough my back
On __________ submarine.

~Kim Donius, AACS Librarian


I'grand a Little Dutch Girl (v2)

I'k a little Dutch girl
Dressed in blueish.
Here are the things
I like to practice:
Salute to the captain,
Bow to the queen,
Plow past dorsum
On the submarine.
I tin do the tap dance,
I can do the split,
I can exercise the holka polka
Just like this.

~Adele Greil


I Went Downtown

I went downtown
To see Ms. Brown,
She gave me a nickel
To buy a pickle,
The pickle was sour,
So I bought a blossom.
The bloom was dead, she gave me a tack.
The tack was precipitous, she gave me a harp.
The harp was bankrupt, she gave me a cloak.
The cloak was tight, she gave me a kite.
The kite abroad flew, and I did besides.
(Histrion runs out at too)

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher


Ink, Ink a Bottle of Ink

Ink, ink, a canteen of ink,
The cork fell off and yous stink.
Not because you're muddied, not because y'all're clean,
Just because you kiss the girls backside the magazine!

~Ellen Stonemason, AACS Music Instructor


Ipsey Pipsey Tell Me True

Ipsey Pipsey, tell me true,
Who shall I be married to?
A, B, C. . . . . .

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher


Jelly in the Dish

Jelly in the dish,
Jelly in the dish,
Wiggle-waggle
Jerk-waggle
Jelly in the dish.

~Marilyn Sloan, Alfred, NY


Lady, Lady Touch on the Ground

Lady, lady, touch on the ground,
Lady, lady, turn effectually.
Turn to the eastward, and turn to the west,
And cull the ane y'all like the all-time.

Lady, lady, impact the basis,
Lady, lady, plow around.
Lady, lady show your shoe,
Lady, lady, now skidoo!

~Erin Pollard & Caitlin Pollard, 2nd Class


Ladybug, Ladybug

Ladybug, Ladybug, plough around,
Ladybug, Ladybug touch the ground.
Ladybug, Ladybug shine your shoes,
Ladybug, Ladybug read the news.
Ladybug, ladybug, how old are you?
One, two, three, four . . . . .

~Mrs. Ordway, AACS 1st Form Instructor


Landon in the White Business firm

Landon in the White House
Waiting to be elected.
Rosevelt in the garbage tin,
Waiting to be collected.

~Marge Sands


Lemon Drops and Saccharide Candy

Lemon drops and sugar candy,
Both of these taste just dandy.
Best of all is blood-red pop,
How many jumps before I stop?
One, two, three . . . . .

~Erin Pollard


Mabel, Mabel Prepare the Table

Mabel, Mabel, set the table,
Just equally fast as you are able.
Don't forget the salt, sugar, vinegar, mustard, red-hot pepper!

~Adele Greil


Mabel, Mabel Nifty and Able

Mabel, Mabel, neat and able.
Mabel, Mabel, set the table,
And don't forget the
Cherry Hot Peppers!

~Ellen Bricklayer, AACS Music Teacher & Caitlin Pollard, AACS Student


Mabel, Mabel Ready the Table (v2)

Mabel, Mabel, set the table.
Don't forget the ruby hot label.
Shake the salt and shake the pepper.
Who will be the highest stepper?
Winds accident hot and winds blow freeze,
How many times did Mabel sneeze?
One, two, 3 . . . . .

~Erin Pollard


Minnie Minnihaha

Minnie Minnihaha went to see her Papa,
Papa died. Minnie cried,
Minnie had a new built-in infant.
Stuck it in the bathtub to see if information technology could swim.
Drank a gallon of water, ate a bar of soap.
In come the Doctor, in came the nurse,
in came the lady with the alligator purse.
Out went the doctor, out went the nurse.
Out went the lady with an alligator bag.

~Kim Donius, AACS Librarian


Miss Lucy had a Baby

Miss Lucy had a baby
And she named him Tiny Tim.
She put him in the bathtub
To encounter if he could swim.
He drank up all the h2o.
He ate upwardly all the lather.
He tried to eat the bathtub
But it wouldn't get down his throat.
Miss Lucy chosen the doctor,
Miss Lucy chosen the nurse.
Miss Lucy chosen the lady with the alligator purse.

~Kim Donius, AACS Librarian


Miss Mary Mack

Miss Mary Mack, Mack, Mack
All dressed in blackness, black, black
With silver buttons, buttons, buttons
All downwards her dorsum, dorsum, back.
She asked her mother, mother, female parent,
For fifteen cents, cents, cents,
To run into the elephant, elephant, elephant,
Bound the debate, fence, fence.
He jumped so high, high, high.
He reached the sky, sky, heaven,
And he never came back, dorsum, back
Till the Fourth of July, lie, lie.

~Katy Mormino, 2nd grade


Mississippi LIves by the Shore

Mississippi lives by the shore,
She has children three and four,
The oldest ane is twenty-four.
She shall ally
Tinker, tailor, soldier, crewman.

~Marilyn Sloan, Alfred, NY


Mother, Mother

Female parent, Female parent, I am ill
Telephone call for the doc over the hill.
In came the dr.,
In came the nurse,
In came the lady with the alligator purse.
"Measles," said the doctor.
"Mumps," said the nurse.
"Nothing," said the lady with the alligator bag.
Out goes the physician, out goes the nurse,
Out goes the lady with the alligator purse.

~Ellen Stonemason, AACS Music Teacher / Mrs. Ordway, AACS lst Grade Teacher / Marilyn Sloan, Alfred, NY


My Mother Said...

My mother said
I never should play
With the gypsies in the forest.
If I did
She would say
"Naughty daughter to disobey."

~Sheila Gilmour


My Mommy Told Me

My mommy told me,
If I was skilful-y
She would buy me,
A rubber dolly.
My auntie told her,
I kissed a soldier.
Now she won't purchase me,
A rubber dolly.

~AACS Parent


Sometime Mother Whittlehouse

Old Mother Whittlehouse
Had a large fit.
First she did the merry-get-circular
And and then she did the split.

~Marilyn Sloan, Alfred, NY


One I dearest, Two I Love

One I dear, 2 I dearest,
Three I love I say;
Four I love with all my heart,
Five I cast away.
Six he loves, Seven she loves,
Viii both dear;
Nine he comes, Ten he tarries,
11 he courts, Twelve he marries.

~Mrs. Harris, AACS Art Teacher


One, Ii, Three A-larry,

1, ii, iii A-larry,
My start name is Mary.
Don't you think that I look beautiful?
In my blood brother'due south bathing adapt?

~Marilyn Sloan, Alfred, NY


One Whale, Two Whales

One whale, 2 whales, three whales, iv,
One orca, two pods, three calves, more!

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Instructor


Peter, Peter Pumpkin Eater

Peter, Peter pumpkin eater.
Had a wife and couldnÕt go along her.
Put her in a pumpkin shell
And there he kept her very well.

~Rocio Moreno, form 8


Policeman, Policeman, Practise Your Duty

Policeman, policeman, do your duty,
Here comes (proper name of next jumper)
And she'south a cutie;
She can jump, she can twist,
But I bet she can't practise this.

~Mrs. Harris, AACS Art Teacher


Postman, Postman Exercise Your Duty

Postman, Postman,
Exercise your duty.
Send this letter
To my cutie.
Don't you lot stop
Nor don't delay.
Go information technology to her
Right abroad.

~Kim Donius, AACS Librarian


Postman, Postman Do Your Duty (v2)

Postman, Postman, exercise your duty.
Send this letter of the alphabet to an American beauty.
DonÕt you end and donÕt filibuster.
Become it to her right away.

~Adele Greil


Rich Man, Poor Human

Rich man, poor man, beggar man, thief,
Doctor, lawyer, Indian Chief.
Her shoes will be
Woods, leather, high heel, low heel, sandals, wooden.
Her dress will be fabricated of
Silk, satin, cotton, batten, rags.
Her house will be
Big house, piddling house, pigpen, barn.
Her rings shall exist made of
Diamonds, rubies, emeralds, glass.
How many children will she get?
1, 2, three . . . . .
And at present your'e married you lot must obey,
You lot must exist truthful in every way.
You must be kind, you must be skilful,
And make your husband chop the wood.

~Marilyn Sloan, Alfred, NY


Robin Hood, Robin Hood Dressed so Good

Robin Hood, Robin Hood dressed and then expert,
Got as many kisses as he could.
How many kisses did he go?
ane, 2, 3 . . . . .

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher


Rooms for Rent

Rooms for rent,
Inquire within.
As I motility out
Let Rachel come up in.

~Adele Greil


Sixteen Bluebirds

Sixteen bluebirds sitting on a fence.
Flapped their wings and started to dance.
Upwardly, downwardly,
All along the line,
Brightly preened and looking fine!
Count 1, 2, 3 . . . . .

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher


Spanish Dancer, Practice the Divide

Spanish dancer, practise the split.
Spanish dancer, requite a kick.
Spanish dancer, plough around.
Castilian dancer, exit of town.

~Adele Greil


Castilian Dancer (v2)

Spanish dancer, do the splits,
Spanish dancer, exercise loftier kicks.
Spanish dancer, clicks a shoe,
Spanish dancer, chooses YOU!

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher


Strawberry Shortcake

Strawberry shortcake, cream on top.
Tell me the name of your sweetheart?
Is it .......
Alex, Brandon, Cam, Danielle, . . . . . .

~Andrea Pinyon, AU Junior


Teddy Bear, Teddy Deport

Teddy comport, teddy comport,
Turn around.
Teddy bear, teddy bear,
Touch the ground.
Teddy bear, teddy carry,
Show your shoe.
Teddy bear, teddy bear,
That volition do.
Teddy bear, teddy bear,
Go upstairs.
Teddy bear, teddy carry,
Say your prayers.
Teddy bear, teddy bear,
Turn out the light.
Teddy behave, teddy carry,
Say good night.

~Mrs. Harris, AACS Fine art Teacher / Caitlin Pollard, 2nd Class / Adele Greil


Teddy Bear, Teddy Carry (v2)

Teddy bear, teddy bear, dressed in blue,
Tin can you do what I tell you to?
Teddy bear, teddy bear, turn around.
Teddy acquit, teddy bear, touch the ground.
Teddy bear, teddy conduct, do the splits.
Teddy bear, teddy bear, give a loftier kick.
Teddy bear, teddy comport, go upstairs.
Teddy deport, teddy bear, say your prayers.
Teddy deport, teddy bear, turn out the light.
Teddy bear, teddy bear, say adept nighttime.

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher


The Eiffel Tower

The Eiffel Tower is 300 meters alpine
From the top to bottom.
We tin can encounter the River Seine.
To climb information technology we pay
One, 2, three. . . . .

~Erin Pollard


The Wind, The Air current

The wind, the air current, the wind blows high,
Information technology blows Mary through the sky.
She is fair and she is pretty
She is the daughter from the can tin city.
She can play the pianoforte, 1 ii three
Mary, Mary, who is she?
Johnny, Johnny says he loves her.
Off they go with a kiss, kiss, kiss.
He took her to the courtyard,
Asked her, ÒWill you ally me?Ó
Yes, No, Perchance and then, Yes, No, Maybe so.

~Marilyn Sloan, Alfred, NY


Iii, Six, Nine

Three, six, nine, the goose drank wine,
The monkey chewed tobacco on the street car line.
The king of beasts choked, the monkey croaked,
And they all went to heaven in a little row boat,
Clap-Clap! Clap-Clap!

~Susan Teagarden, AACS Parent


Two Lilliputian Pails of H2o

Two little pails of h2o,
2 trivial pails of water,
Girls in wooden shoes,
Girls with wooden legs.
You can go through my garden fence, la, la,
The king drove through my garden debate, la, la.
One, two, iii . . . . .

~Erin Pollard


Up the Ladder, Down the Ladder

Up the ladder, down the ladder,
A, B, C,
Up the ladder, downwards the ladder,
H - O - T!

~Ellen Bricklayer, AACS Music Instructor


Launder the Dishes

Launder the dishes dry the dishes,
Take a cup of tea.
Don't forget the carbohydrate.
A-i, a-ii, a-three . . .

~Erin Pollard


When I Was...

When I was one I ate a bun,
Going over the sea.
I jumped aboard a sailorman's ship,
And the sailorman said to me,
"Going over, going nether,
Stand at attention like a soldier,
With a one, two, and three."

When I was ii I buckled my shoe,
Going over the bounding main.
I jumped aboard a sailormanÕs ship,
And the sailorman said to me, . . ..

When I was three I banged my knee,
When I was four I shut the door,
When I was five I learned to jive,
When I was half-dozen I picked up sticks,
When I was 7 I went to heaven,
When I was eight I learned to skate,
When I was 9 I climbed a vine,
When I was ten I caught a hen,

~Ellen Bricklayer, AACS Music Teacher


Will I Marry?

Will I marry, tell me so,
Is the respond yep or no?
Yes, no maybe then, yes, no, maybe so . . . . .

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher


Windy, Windy Weather

Windy, windy conditions,
All in together,
Jan, February . . ..
Windy, windy weather,
They all run out together,
January, February . . . . .

~Ellen Bricklayer, AACS Music Teacher


With Salad I am Sick

With salad I am sick,
With celery I am cured.
How many stalks of celery
One, ii, iii . . . . .

~Erin Pollard


Zoop La La

Zoop la la,
Hey la la,
Zoop la la,
Hey la la,
Zoop, zoop, zoop

~Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher


My Young Human being

My young man has gone to France,
To teach the ladies how to trip the light fantastic.
When he comes dorsum,
He'll marry me,
And we'll trip the light fantastic the polka i ii 3
1 2 3, 1 ii 3,

Nosotros'll dance the polka one ii 3.

About the Author

matt-hopkins.jpg Matt Hopkins is a former competitive speed jumper and leap rope double-decker. Matt has won numerous national championships in speed jumping, and his athletes have won several national speed and freestyle titles and have broken earth and national speed records. He besides taught center and elementary school PE in Leavenworth WA for 23 years.

5th Jul 2014 Matt Hopkins

madridyalmled1962.blogspot.com

Source: https://buyjumpropes.net/resources/jump-rope-rhymes-songs-buyjumpropesnet/

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