Jack and Jill don't want to eat the apples right now
Couldn't a boy & girl think of anything else to do besides eat the apples? And did a serpent give Jill the apple?
He is in Jack and Jill.
As far as the Nursery rhyme in concerned, they just did, no reason given. A historical interpretation refers to Louis XVl and Marie Antoinette of France. Louis was deposed and beheaded, thus Jack fell down and lost his crown. Marie Antoinette suffered the same fate, so Jill came tumbling after.
Omfg! Yeah its so funny!
Jack and Jill were just typical English children. Jack is a nickname for John.They were two kids who went up a hill to get a pail of water from the well at the top of the hill. They went up, then they came tumbling down.
To show joint possession in the possessive form, you would list all the owners followed by an apostrophe and the letter "s" at the end. For example, "The car of Amy and John" would become "Amy and John's car."
Adam Sandler's most recent movie is Just Go With It.
The rhyme "Jack and Jill" tells the story of two children who go up a hill to fetch a pail of water. Jack falls down and breaks his crown, and Jill comes tumbling after. The meaning of the rhyme is not definitively known, but it is often interpreted as a cautionary tale about the consequences of reckless behavior or simply as a playful nursery rhyme without a specific moral.
you can get apples or big apples in apple woods if u dont know where that is, progress in the story until chatot wants you to get some perfect apples in apple woods so just look for apples while in the dungeons to get big or regular appples then get to the end to see a cutscene about the perfect apples
they dont, they frezze they just fall of when it gets cold like apples in the in the wnter.
They were two kids who went up a hill to get a pail of water from the well...at the top of the hill. The poem states that Jack fell down and broke his crown, which could be inferred in many ways. While a crown could rather gruesomely mean a head, it could also refer to your teeth.
The pail in the poem "Jack and Jill" represents the vessel used by the characters to fetch water from the well. It symbolizes a simple and common task that can lead to unforeseen consequences, as seen in the subsequent fall of Jack and Jill.
no we dont. your body can get it's sugars from Fruits like Apples and Oranges the Natural way. sugars are just a treat. not a nessesity