Little bunny foo foo hopping thru the forest scooping up the field mice and bopping them on the head
The good fairy came down and said "little bunny foo foo, i don't wanna see you picking on the field mice
And bopping them on the head!
I'll give you three chances, and if you don't obey. . . I will turn you into a goon!"
THE NEXT DAY
Little Bunny foo foo hopping thru the forest scooping up the field mice and bopping them on the head
The good fairy came down and said "little bunny foo foo, i don't wanna see you picking on the field mice
And bopping them on the head!
I'll give you two more chances, and if you don't obey . . . I will turn you into a goon!"
THE NEXT DAY
Little bunny foo foo hopping thru the forest scooping up the field mice and bopping them on the head
The good fairy came down and said "little bunny foo foo, i don't wanna see you picking on the field mice
and bopping them on the head!
I'll give you one more chance, and if you don't obey . . . I'll turn you into a goon!"
THE NEXT DAY
Little bunny foo foo hopping thru the forest scooping up the field mice and bopping them on the head
The good fairy came down and said "little bunny foo foo, I don't wanna see you picking on the field mice
and bopping them on the head!
I gave you three chances and you did not obey, so im turning you into a goon!"
POOF!!!!!
The moral of the story is "Hare today, Goon tomorrow!"
It is in the books Little Rabbit Foo Foo by Michael Rosen illustrated by Harold Robins, Walker Books Ltd, 2003, and Little Bunny Foo Foo: Told and Sung by the Good Fairy by Paul Brett Johnson, Scholastic Press, 2004.
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Bunny_Foo_Foo"
OWatA Foo l IAm O Wat A Fool I Am "oh what a fool i am" stupid really...
The term "foo" - as well as "bar", "baz", "mu" and "qux" - are sometimes used as placeholder names (also referred to as metasyntactic variables) in computer programming or computer-related documentation.When you do not want to use a real variable name (because the part of the program defining it has not yet been written) you substitute "foo". when discussing the program with other developers.(not to be confused with the acronym "FUBAR" which stands for Fu***d Up Beyond All Recognition.
Sorry; my favorite online etymological dictionary has no such listing. However, "fiddle" does carry a contemptuous sense, "fiddle-faddle" means "trifles" or "busy oneself with trifles; talk nonsense", and "fiddle-dee-dee" is a contemptuous nonsense word.
The word "eellogofusciouhipoppokunurious" is a non-standard English word (as suggested by the unusual construction "fusciouh" in the center. So any pronunciation at all is acceptable.Here's one : "EEL-loh-goh-FOO-shee-oh-hip-PAH-poh-kuh-NU-ree-us"
"I love you like crazy!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Je t'aime comme un fou! The pronunciation of the words -- which translate literally as "I love you like a madman!" -- will be "zhuh tehm kuh-meh foo" in French.
No. Little Bunny Foo Foo specializes in "bopping," and prefers to do so only to the field mice.
little bunny foo foo
Yes, in the children's song "Little Bunny Foo Foo," the bunny does bop field mice on the head, not squirrels. This action is part of the song's playful rhyming and repetition.
Austin Shaub wrote that.
Bunny Foo Foo pops heads off of field mice, not squirrels
Don't hurt others and do what your told. :)
Little Bunny Foo-foo.
The nursery rhyme "Little Bunny Foo Foo" was first documented in the 1960s, but its exact origins are uncertain. It has since become a popular children's song featuring a mischievous bunny and a field mouse.
No, but the guillotine would've been more humane. Little Bunny Foo Foo bopped field mice on the head. To this day it remains unknown how many of the mice that Foo Foo assaulted survived.
LITTLE BUNNY FUFU HOPPING THROUGH THE FOREST SCOOPEN UP THE FIELD MICE AND BOPEN EM ON THE HEAD DOWN CAME A FAIRY AND SAID.......................... THAT IS ALL I REMEMDER. ASK A MUSIC TEACHER : "Little Rabbit Foo FOO : hopping through the forest : Scooping up the field mice : And bopping them on the head! : Down came the Good Fairy, and she said: : "Little Rabbit Foo Foo : I don't wanna see you : Scooping up the field mice : And bopping them on the head! : I will give you three chances, : And if you don't behave, I will turn you into a GOON!"
Yes, there are several fairy tales and nursery rhymes that feature bunnies. Examples include "The Tale of Peter Rabbit" by Beatrix Potter and the nursery rhyme "Little Bunny Foo Foo." Bunnies are often depicted as playful and mischievous characters in these stories.
Foo a Little Bally-Hoo - 1945 was released on: USA: 17 September 1945