"Three score and ten" in the nursery rhyme "The Four and Twenty Blackbirds" refers to the number 70. In the context of the rhyme, it signifies the age of the "old woman" who was baking the pie with the blackbirds in it.
I'm pretty sure it means 70 years. "score" being 20 years.
You are going to have to do the work yourself here. Pick any nursery rhyme you like, and write out the words. Then, just tell what the words seem to mean to you instead of what you've always been told that they mean.
The nursery rhyme "Old King Cole" is about a merry and indulgent king who lived in a palace with a lavish court. The rhyme describes the king's lifestyle of music, food, and fun, portraying a carefree and hedonistic character.
Attractive face. (primarily female directed compliment.)
Made up nursery rhyme.
In the nursery rhyme "Ten Little Indian Boys," going in for law means that one of the boys becomes a lawyer. It signifies that one of the boys pursues a career in the legal profession.
In the nursery rhyme "Three Blind Mice," the bramble hedge refers to a thorny shrub or bush that the mice run into and get injured by. It is used to highlight the danger and obstacles that the mice face in their journey.
In the nursery rhyme "Three Blind Mice," the line "They had no end" likely suggests that the mice were relentlessly pursued or in an ongoing predicament with no clear resolution or escape. It conveys a sense of imminent danger or an endless struggle.
RRRTB stands for "Round and Round the Garden like a Teddy Bear." It is a commonly known nursery rhyme that involves a hand gesture of walking fingertips around a child's palm like a teddy bear.
A score is 20 and three score is 60. Three score cubits means 60 cubits, a measure of length.
If you mean the nursery rhyme, Who Killed Cock Robin, it was created in 1744. If you mean the band, it was created in 1982, disbanded in 1990, and reformed in 2006.
Yes, once your two Sims have "tried for baby" if the woman is pregnant there will be a little lullaby.
Nothing. It's a play on the nursery rhyme where jack jumps over the candle. (i think)