Ring Around Rosie refers to The Plague. People believed if they filled their pockets with sweet scented flowers ie posies, they can ward off the disease. But in the end they die ie all fall down. for more info, Google Ring Around Rosie.
This is what they call a leading question. Most people would say Ring a ring of roses but the rhyme existed long after the black death 'died' out and just refers to people dying from sneezing, which isn't linked to the black death at all.
The nursery rhyme with the initials "BSWTS" is "Baa, Baa, Black Sheep."
Yes ring a ring of roses or whatever it was called has somthing to do with the black death
"Ring Around the Rosie" is a children's nursery rhyme believed by some to have origins related to the Black Death. The lyrics describe symptoms of the plague such as the ring-shaped rash ('rosie') and the flowers carried for the scent-mask ('pocket full of posies'). The connection, however, is debated among historians and scholars.
You are probably asking about the song and nursery rhyme, "Ring a Ring o' Roses," which is often said to have come into being because of the Black Death. In fact, this piece was first published in 1881, and the association with the Black Death was not made in print before World War II. So the association would appear to be a myth that survives because it can easily be believed. There is a link to the plague interpretation of an article on the nursery rhyme below.
Master
a nursery rhyme
No.
Baa Baa black sheep
One for Sorrow - nursery rhyme - was created in 1780.
The nursery rhyme with the initials MPHAD is "Mary Had a Little Lamb."
"Baa Baa Black Sheep" is a nursery rhyme that mentions a woolly mammal, the sheep. It tells the story of a sheep that gives wool, requesting sharing among three different entities.