The original tongue-twister is of unknown origin. In it,
"How much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?
is paired with
"A woodchuck would chuck all the wood he could if a woodchuck could chuck wood."
or
"As much wood as a woodchuck would, if a woodchuck could chuck wood."
People who could write at the time Shakespeare wrote most likely wrote. I assume at least one of your (the reader or who the reader is reading to) ancestors wrote unless I'm wrong somehow.
Shakespeare wrote all of his plays for the same reason: it was his job. He was a professional playwright. He could have had other reasons as well. Likely, he enjoyed the topics that he wrote about, and he thought that the parts would be funny and give the audience a laugh. He also often wrote specific lines into his plays that would make his benefactors pleased.
Wendy Morton
Arnold 'Poet' Jackson wrote all of the poems himself.
Nope. Who would of wrote all his plays if he wasn't alive?
The origin of this tongue twister is unknown.It reads:How much wood would a woodchuck chuckif a woodchuck could chuck wood?And the reply is:He would chuck, he would, as much as he could,and chuck as much wood as a woodchuck wouldif a woodchuck could chuck wood.
I did.
In the tongue twister, "chuck" is used as a verb to describe the action of throwing or moving something (wood, in this case) with force. The phrase plays on the sound similarity between a woodchuck (a groundhog-like animal) and the action of chucking wood.
Chuck Johnston
Chuck Berry is the lyricist who wrote 'Oh Maybelline'
Its Johnny B. Goode I believe and Chuck Berry
Most likely Chuck Norris!
Chuck & Greg Day
Chuck Berry wrote My Ding-a-Ling for the album The London Chuck Berry Sessions, released in 1972. It was his only #1 hit.
Chuck Comeau
Chuck Berry wrote it. According to internet sources, he was in jail at the time, and had to borrow an atlas to be sure of the cities on the route to California.
Bob Seger