Little Bo Peep lost her sheep. Later in the nusery rhyme she finds them but they come back without their tails!
Their mittens.
Bo Peep lost her sheep in the nursery rhyme because they wandered off while she wasn't paying attention. It's a cautionary tale to remind children to keep track of their responsibilities.
her undies, iphone, and boyfriend
Her sheep. -_-
The meaning of the word tumbling as used in the nursery rhyme Jack and Jill is to lose balance and fall, stumble, take a spill, or topple over.
7000
Lucy Locket lost her pocket.
The literary device of almost rhyme is called slant rhyme or half rhyme. It involves words that have similar but not identical sounds, such as "close" and "lose." This technique is commonly used in poetry to create subtle connections between words.
Make it appealing, with no worn out toys. Buy only a tiny bit of food-you lose money in the process by buying food for your nursery, but most people don't like a nursery with a closed dining hall. Enroll your own babies until people star enrolling other babies.
You look for it, and if you lose it again, buy a ''decorate your own treasure chest" set in a toy store and keep your tama IN the chest
No, you have to lose the "ed" from "drained" or add it to "contain," unless you are going for more of a free verse effect.
As far as I know, there is no word that is an exact rhyme with newspaper. There are some words that rhyme with "news", however: lose, use, whose, and muse are a few of them.