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Cooties - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cooties is a non-scientific term in North American English used by children for a disease or condition perceived to infect others members of the opposite sex. One catches cooties through any form of ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooties |
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Cootie - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cootie can refer to: • Head lice (slang) • Cooties, North American children's slang for an imaginary disease • Cootie (game), a game in which each player assembles a bug from plastic parts upon the r...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cootie |
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I recently ordered Milton Bradley's "Ants In The Pants" and "Cootie Bug" games for my 3 year old son. These games were a total blast from the past and I just had to get them when I saw them on your site. Ants In The Pants is great but Cootie Bug is NOT good for this age group.
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Play the classic battleship game with rree battleship game sheets to print ... To download and print the Cootie Catcher template...you need to have the Adobe Acrobat Reader installed. If you need it, you can freely download it from Adobe's site. If you have Adobe Acrobat Reader -- download and print the template file.
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Cootie (game) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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You've got all kinds of COOTIES now! ... As you know, there is only one way to get rid of the COOTIES! And that is to give them to someone else!! ... More Fun & Silly Greetings...
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Where did the word 'cooties' for lice come from? ... [Q] From Sarah: Children always say they’re afraid of cooties, and I’ve always been curious where the word came from. ... There was also the cootie catcher, a folded paper shape that you could use to pretend you had discovered cooties on a schoolmate.
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It's possible to include sex (as distinct from romance) without adding girl cooties, but it's risky. There's always the chance that the hero might take a few minutes to talk to the girl afterward, and that gets you perilously close to cootie territory.
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August 16, 1985 ... Can you tell me the origin of the slang word "cooties," as in "OOOooooh! Melvin touched me! I have Melvin's cooties!" Is this an American vulgarism, or is it a well-known expression in the English-speaking world? ... According to Eric Partridge, whose knowledge of things linguistic is almost as awesome as...
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Girls invested (and still invest) a lot of time in making cootie catchers out of folded paper, which were apparently used at one time to catch cooties as they fell from someone's head. This custom had also died out by my school days and cootie catchers were used exclusively for telling fortunes.
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