Rose is Rose by Don Wimmer and Pat Brady for September 22, 2016

  1. Flash
    pschearer Premium Member over 7 years ago

    Is there a single seesaw left in the U.S.? They’ve been removing them as safety hazards for decades.

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    Qiset  over 7 years ago

    shades of B.F.Skinner. Keep the kids in cages until they grow up.

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    awilzig Premium Member over 7 years ago

    As a little kid I got hit under the chin by a see-saw but still kept going back to them. Loved them!

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    1953Baby  over 7 years ago

    I’m not so sure it’s the “dangerous” stuff as it is the parents/lawyers who think they can make a bundle suing for their kids’ accidents. . .

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    1953Baby  over 7 years ago

    P.S. We used to call them teeter-totters— anybody else ever use this term? (I grew up in the southwest, my mom was from Kansas and my dad from New England. . .which region does that belong to?)

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    Joan32  over 7 years ago

    South Dakota used teeter totter and I was aware of see saw but that was during the 2nd WW.

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    tygrkhat40  over 7 years ago

    We called it a teeter-totter here in Western New York.

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    sheepdawg  over 7 years ago

    Hrm, in Tennessee we had a different toy called a teeter totter. Its hinge was above and would swing like a pendulum with one rider on either side to push and pull it along the arc.

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    Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo]  over 7 years ago

    Teeter saws and see totters…

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    DM2860  over 7 years ago

    OK, as a guardian angel, he is very attentive but he never seems very clever.

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    boxbabies  over 7 years ago

    One of my grandma’s favorite stories involved a wooden seesaw, my mom (her daughter-in-law from Germany) and a pair of tweezers.

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    Phatts  over 7 years ago

    this kid needs to find some friends his own age

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    finnygirl Premium Member over 7 years ago

    I grew up in Colorado, and we called them both – teeter-totters and see-saws. Teeter-totter might have been a little more common, but I don’t remember for sure.

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  14. Leeroycropavatar
    Leeroy  over 7 years ago

    I grew up in southern California. I called it a see-saw. Neighbor kids across the street called it a teeter-totter. I’d say it was about even which name was used.

    See-saws. Slip n slides. Water wiggles! Rickety metal slides, ring sets, swing sets, and the partially-cemented decommissioned F-86 Sabre jet in the park in West Covina!

    None of these things will be familiar to children now, I’ll bet. Too bad.

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  15. Flash
    pschearer Premium Member over 7 years ago

    From my favorite dictionary. Sorry, you’ll have to supply the bold and italics yourself:

    tee·ter-tot·ter (tē"tər-tŏt′ər)

    n. Upper Northern & Western U.S. See seesaw.

    Regional Note: The outdoor toy usually called a seesaw has a number of regional names, New England having the greatest variety in the smallest area. In southeast New England it is called a tilt or a tilting board. Speakers in northeast Massachusetts call it a teedle board; in the Narragansett Bay area the term changes to dandle or dandle board. Teeter or teeterboard is used more generally in the northeast United States, while teeter-totter, probably the most common term after seesaw, is used across the inland northern states and westward to the West Coast. Both seesaw (from the verb saw) and teeter-totter (from teeter, as in to teeter on the edge) demonstrate the linguistic process called reduplication, where a word or syllable is doubled, often with a different vowel. Reduplication is typical of words that indicate repeated activity, such as riding up and down on a seesaw.

    The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Copyright© 2006, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

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  16. Doggie1
    hcarpenter1  over 7 years ago

    what is he doing wrong. as long as he gets the job done, who cares.

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    Grace Premium Member over 7 years ago

    Remember the playground piece where you sat (stood/kneeled) upon it and it was spun around? We’d get thrown off often onto the concrete and just get up and run to get back on. We called them a merry go round in CT…. Never liked see saws much, fear of heights..

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