Mary Had A Little Lamb can be considered a song as well as a nursery rhyme (and w/all due respect to Doug, Stevie Ray Vaughn has the best version!). Are we all sure that Edison spoke the words, rather than sang them?click here bro http://www.funtrivia.com/askft/Question41376.html and also wright on my wall its 123messwithme
Mary Had a Little Lamb
Mary had a little lamb was used to test the Edison phonograph in l877 Thomas Edison, inventor here. curiously early Edison phonos did NOT use electricity but were clockwork drive and were intended to be used more like modern tape recorders, being able to record as well as play back, First cylinders, then discs, then Disk Jockeys.
A Tisket, A Tasket
No, it is a nursery rhyme.
Frere Jacques.
It is a nursery rhyme, name of writer not known, origin possible in Germany from the beginnings of the 1800's or earlier
Mary had a little lamb
a nursery rhyme
Mary Had A Little Lamb
Thomas Edison recited the nursery rhyme "Mary Had a Little Lamb" to test his invention of the phonograph in 1877, not in 1872.
Jack and Jill, the traditional English nursery rhyme, is believed to have been published in 1765. Although the original author was not recorded, the first printed version of the nursery rhyme appeared in a reprint of John Newbery's Mother Goose's Melody.
One for Sorrow - nursery rhyme - was created in 1780.
The nursery rhyme with the initials MPHAD is "Mary Had a Little Lamb."
Mary had a little lamb was used to test the Edison phonograph in l877 Thomas Edison, inventor here. curiously early Edison phonos did NOT use electricity but were clockwork drive and were intended to be used more like modern tape recorders, being able to record as well as play back, First cylinders, then discs, then Disk Jockeys.
The nursery rhyme with the initials "BSWTS" is "Baa, Baa, Black Sheep."
The nursery rhyme with the initials IRIP is "It's Raining, It's Pouring."
The wise old owl in the famous nursery rhyme 'A Wise Old Owl' lives in an oak tree. Though its origins are vague, it is commonly accepted that the nursery rhyme played on the common symbolic value of the owl as wisdom. Originally, it was told to teach children the virtue of being quiet, or seen and not heard.
"Lucy Locket Lost Her Pocket" is a popular English nursery rhyme that dates back to the 18th century. The rhyme is about a girl named Lucy Locket who loses her pocket containing money and keys. There are variations of the rhyme with different endings, but they all revolve around Lucy's misfortune.