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Ring around the roses
Ring a Ring o' Roses was created in 1881.
According to the Oxford Dictionary of Nursery Rhymes, the first verse of Ring A Ring Of Roses is:Ring-a-ring o' roses,A pocket full of posies,A-tishoo! A-tishoo!We all fall down.In the United States, this is usually altered to:Ring around the rosie,A pocket full of posies,Ashes, ashes,We all fall down.The Oxford Dictionary of Nursery Rhymes cites what it describes a 'a sequel' which was popular in the 1940s:The cows are in the meadowLying fast asleepA-tishoo! Atishoo!We all get up again.Wikipedia gives several examples of other verses (see Related Link below) but it is more common to simply repeat the first verse.Children in Australia sing a second verse which goes:The cows are in the meadowEating lots of grass,When our mother calls usWe all jump up
Ring o' ring o' roses
No, "Ring a Ring o' Roses" is a traditional nursery rhyme believed to have originated in the 18th century. It is not directly related to the famine.
The original version is the type of rose , and the diamond is penetrated on it . It is the most beautiful ring that I have ever seen in this world .
It is supposed to refer to one of the plagues that ravished England in the 16th Century.
Yes ring a ring of roses or whatever it was called has somthing to do with the black death
a radio, reeses chocolate, a rat, raft, and a rake............
There is no biblical verse that specifically mentions King Solomon's ring. The legend of King Solomon's ring is actually from non-biblical Jewish folklore and is not found in the Bible.
The nursery rhyme "Ring-a-ring of roses" does not actually commemorate a historic event. It is commonly believed to be based on the Great Plague of London in 1665, but this connection has been widely debated and there is no concrete evidence to support it.
Uranus has the second largest ring system after Saturn.