Translate

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Foot Stomping Cheers Demographic Information: City & State Locations In The United States (1970s through 2010) Complete Reprint

Edited by Azizi Powell

This pancocojams post presents general information about foot stomping cheers and provides a list of foot stomping cheers that I have come across that include demographic information (city/state or some other geographic location references).

This 2026 post replaces the now deleted pancocojams posts 2017 and 2021 posts on this subject. That 2021 post had three comments that I wrote and added to that post's discussion thread. One of those comments is given as Addendum #2 to this 2026 post.

Pancocojams posts include many more examples of foot stomping cheers than the ones that I've found with geographical information.

Also, read Addendum #1 given below about the cocojams.com citation that is given for some of these examples. 

The content of this post is presented for folkloric and cultural purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to all those who are quoted in this post.  

****
DISCLAIMER
The 1970s through 2010 time frame for this post reflects my direct collection activities and my my daughter's collection activities. (My daughter's name is given as "TMP" in a number of these Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania examples.I have only found a few examples online of what I would categorize as foot stomping cheers after 2010. If you are aware of any examples of these cheers after 2010, please share those examples.

**
It seems very likely to me that there were foot stomping cheer examples in many cities during the 1970s through 2010 that aren't included in this geographical demographic list.

**
YouTube's Feb. 2019 decision to disable comments for most of its children's videos meant that most comments that included examples of children's rhymes, singing games, and cheers (including foot stomping cheers) that hadn't been previously retrieved (by me and others) were forever lost and the opportunities to read/collect other (old or new) examples were also lost.

Click 
https://www.theverge.com/2019/2/28/18244954/youtube-comments-minor-children-exploitation-monetization-creators for an article about the reasons why YouTube decided to disable comments for most children's videos.

**
The collection of  foot stomping cheers that are found in the alphabetized pancocojams pages include many more cheers which were published without geographical citations. 

**
Click http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2016/09/foot-stomping-cheers-alphabetical-list.html for Part I (Numbers - C) of this series. The links to the other four pages of my Pancocojams compilation of foot stomping cheer are found on that post and every post in that series.

****
PANCOCOJAMS EDITOR'S COMMENTS
This post provides a list of city/state demographics for examples of foot stomping cheers that I have directly collected, or my daughter performed or directly collected from a summer camp that she attended and later where she was a counselor.

In addition, this post includes a list of foot stomping cheers that cite cities/states for the foot stomping cheers that I have found (as of this date) either online (by "surfing" the internet) or off-line (in a vinyl record or in books), or that I have received through email.

Some text (word only) examples of these foot stomping cheers are included after their titles.

For the words to most* of the foot stomping cheer examples that I've come across as of this    date (March 14, 2021) click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2016/09/foot-stomping-cheers-alphabetical-list.html for Part I of a five part alphabetical listing of foot stomping cheers. The links to the other parts of this series are included in each post. 

*I didn't include all of the examples that I've come across of the once very popular cheers such as "Gigalo". Note that "Gigalo" and the (also very popular cheer "Hollywood Swinging") were also performed as hand clap rhymes. My sense is that the foot stopping cheer version of these rhymes preceded the hand clap versions.

"Foot stomping cheers" are also called "cheers", "steps", "chants", "dancing games", and other referents. In her 2006 book 
The Games That Black Girls Play, Kyra Gaunt uses the term "cheers" and wrote that "cheers" are called "scolds".

Most of the examples of foot stomping cheers that I've directly collected are from African American girls (mostly between the ages of 7-12 years) in the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area*. While I've included "the Pittsburgh Pensylvania area" as one of the city/states listed, this post mostly focuses on compiling a list of other United State city/states with pre-2000 examples of foot stomping cheers.

As of the date of this post's publication, I've not found any examples of foot stomping cheers  in any country but the United States, except for examples of "Shabooya Roll Call" which was popularized by its inclusion in the 2006 cheerleader movie Bring It On All Or Nothing. If you know of any other examples of footstomping cheers that are performed outside of the United States, please add that information in the comment section below.

*In the context of this study, "Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area" means many Pittsburgh neighborhoods that are considered "Black" or "mostly Black" neighborhoods" such as (my home location) East Liberty/Garfield, as well as Homewood, and the Northside. In the context of this post, the Pittsburgh Pennsylvania area also includes certain nearby communities such as Braddock, Pennsylvania and Rankin, Pennsylvania. 

In the context of this study, "Pittsburgh Pennsylvania area" includes those examples that I collected from children (mostly African American girls ages 7-12 years) who attended two after school programs that I started in 1999 to around 2004-Alafia Children's Ensemble- (one in Braddock, Pennsylvania and one in Pittsburgh's East liberty/Garfield community where I lived and still live).

(Note that versions of the same cheers from Pittsburgh neighborhoods or from Pittsburgh area communities (such as Braddock, Pennsylvania and Rankin, Pennsylvania) are often at least somewhat different. However, some examples of certain cheers from the same neighborhood over decades might be the same or very similar.)

****
DEFINITION OF AND MY GENERAL COMMENTS ABOUT "FOOT STOMPING CHEERS"
"Foot stomping cheers" is my term for a sub-set of children's cheerleader cheers which appears to have originated among African American school girls in the mid 1970s. Briefly put, foot stomping cheers are formulaic compositions which have a modified call & response structure that I refer to as "group/consecutive soloist". What "group/consecutive soloist" means is that the group voice is the first voice that is heard in those cheers. A designated soloist responds to the rest of the group's words and those voices alternate until that rendition ends (usually with the soloist's voice or the soloist & the rest of the group's voice). However, the cheer immediately begins again with the next designated soloist and this pattern continues until every member of the group has had a turn as the soloist.

Foot stomping cheers are chanted while their performers execute choreographed, syncopated, percussive movement routines that are very similar to African American originated Greek lettered fraternity & sorority stepping (steppin). Most foot stomping cheers use this beat pattern: "stomp clap/ stomp stomp/ clap". Another beat pattern is "stomp stomp clap/ stomp stomp clap." Those two standard beat patterns appear to be used for all foot stomping cheers. Moderate tempo 4/4 beats created by those foot stomps alternate with the chanters'(individual) hand claps, body pats (especially thigh pats), and less frequently, finger snaps. Because these 4/4 beats are omnipresent in R&B, Hip-Hop, Rock, Gospel, and other forms of music, foot stomping cheer routines aren't that difficult for many African Americans (and others) to learn.

The well known 1977 record "We Will Rock You" by Queen is an excellent example of a Rock song that has a 4/4 beat and therefore could serve as a backdrop for a foot stomping routine (recognizing, of course, that foot stomping chants aren't meant to be performed to recorded music).

The "Shabooya Roll Call" cheer that is performed in the 2006 cheerleading movie Bring It On All Or Nothing is probably the most well known example of a foot stomping cheer, although I consider the stepping/dance movement that the girls do in that movie while chanting that cheer to be quite exaggerated.

****
LIST OF CITY (AND STATE) WITH EXAMPLES OF FOOT STOMPING CHEERS
The city/state names are given in alphabetical order. With the exception of examples from "Pittsburgh Pennsylvania area", the titles of the foot stomping examples that I have collected or found online etc.

Because my "collection" contains so many examples from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (from the mid 1980s to sometime in 2009), I've chosen not to add the names of those examples under the Pittsburgh, PA. area entry. Instead, when an example from another city is the same or similar to one or more versions from the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area, I've noted that with these words in parenthesis (example/ multiple examples same/similar in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area). When versions of that examples are also found on other examples with no demographic I've added this note: (multiple examples same/similar in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area and elsewhere throughout the United States).

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2016/09/foot-stomping-cheers-alphabetical-list.html for Part I of a five part alphabetical listing of foot stomping cheers that includes these city/state demographics, including those for Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area. The hyperlinks for the other posts in that series are given on each posts in that series.

These entries are given in alphabetical order. The entries include the city (and/or state) name [given in bold font*] then the name/s of the examples, the way the example/s were collected, and the date of collection/retrieval. Some other editorial notes may be included after some of these entries. I've also added the words to the three examples that I've found which are from the late 1970s.

*bold font added March 12, 2021  

A, B
Ann, Arbor, Michigan
"Oolay Oolay"* in The Games Black Girls Play by Kyra D. Gaunt, (page 77) contributor Tomika and Laura, mid 1990s
-snip-
This is a version of the cheer "Hula Hula", (multiple same/similar examples in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area and elsewhere throughout the United States)

**
Atlantic City, New Jersey
"Introduce yourself" [late 1970s, Atlantic City, New Jersey]
"Hey girl, hey you, introduce yourself. Introduce yourself."
Then each individual girl says a rhyme about themselves, like,
"My name is Joan (group says "check") I'm from AC ("check") I come to say ("check") Don't mess with me ("Check it out")
-Joan C.(Anglo-American female ; chanted by Black, Latino, and White girls at Catholic High School in Atlantic City, New Jersey, late 1970s; electronic message to Azizi Powell; 2/11/2007 (via Mudcat) 
-snip-
; (multiple same/similar examples in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area and elsewhere throughout the United States)

**
Birmingham, Alabama; 1990s
“Angels Go Swinging”, posted in cocojams.com (my no longer active cultural website)
(version of "Hollywood"; (multiple same/similar examples in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area and elsewhere throughout the United States)

****
Brooklyn, New York [Read the entries below for New York City.)

****

C, D
Chicago, Illinois
[version] "Tell It, Tell it" (also known as "Tell It Like It Is"
Chrystal Smith, comment dated July 14, 2017 (comment in discussion thread for vlog https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KfzHL_1PdbY
Let's Discuss: Black Girl Childhood Hand Games and Sing Songs")

**
Also, from Chicago, Illinois, (early 1980s) noted in The Games Black Girls Play by Kyra D. Gaunt; contributor: LaShonda (pages 182) "Planet Rock"

**
"Hollywood Swinging"; (multiple same/similar examples in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area and elsewhere throughout the United States)
**
"Take Your Time"

**
Also, Chicago Illinois:
"[insert name] Got The Rhythm"
comment from Jennifer Martin (posting as a guest on I'm Rubber . You're Glue: Children's Rhymes thread, Mudcat , Feb 3, 2012
"When I was growing up in Chicago in a primarily African-American neighborhood in the mid 70s (This was probably 1976-1978) we used to do a song where a small group of us would stand in a circle and take turns doing little dance solos with different body parts, for example if Jane, Susan and Mary were in the circle we would all sing:

 "Jane's got the rhythm, rhythm in her arms" and while Jane would move her arms around we'd all sing "Umm, check it out, umm-umm check it out", then "Susan's got the rhythm, rhythm in her hips" and Susan would swivel her hips around while we all sang "Umm, check it out, umm-umm check it out" and on and on with each kid doing a different body part (head, legs, butt, waist, etc.) we all agreed in advance who would do each body part before we all started singing.

It's 35 years later and I still get that song stuck in my head sometimes and nobody here in California seems to have ever heard it..."

**
"Tell It"
[comment]
Yes!!!! I grew up in Chicago and me and my aunt JUST had this conversation!!! How about "tell it, tell it tell it like it is. I go to school (tell it tell it)

Smoking kools (tell it tell it)

I walk the streets (tell it tell it)

10 times a week (tell it tell it)

I'm number third (tell it tell it)

Smoking herb (tell it tell it)....

& the nonsense continues. Smh... my grandmother wouldn't let us sing that one.
-Chrystal Smith, 2017,  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KfzHL_1PdbY&ab_channel=EbonyJanicePeace  "Let's Discuss: Black Girl Childhood Hand Games and Sing Songs"
-snip-
I've found a number of versions of this cheer online without any city/state demograpics. 

**
South Chicago (Chicago Heights), Illinois
Ruth Nicole Brown was born and raised in South Chicago (Chicago Heights), Illinois (quoting the  forward of the book xvii Black Girlhood Celebration: Toward a Hip-hop Feminist Pedagogy by Ruth Nicole Brown, 2008

[page 43 of that book]
"In “Eastgate” cheers were “serious” Black girl battles. In a social and cultural capital sense we were gangs. Groups of girls formed a posse and challenged girls on any street corner in particular to battle using our words and cheers to rhyme, our bodies to make beats.

Tell it tell it tell it like it is (uh hun)
tell it tell it tell it like it is
My name Nicole (tell it tell it)
I’m on the line (tell it tell it)
And I can do it (tell it tell it)
To the Capricorn sign (tell it tell it)
And you know what? (what?)
And you know what (what?)
Your man was in my body and he did some karate and he
knocked on my door, but he didn’t get no more.

That’s how I remember one of my favorite cheers"...

**
Chicago, Illinois
"Gigalo"
Rafeldelaghetto, June 26, 2017 in https://www.lipstickalley.com/threads/black-girl-rhymes-what-was-yours-growing-up.1196979/page-2 "Black girl rhymes: What was yours growing up)
(quoting another commenter Zazu who listed words from several rhymes and then wrote
"
My hands up high my feet down low

And this the way I gigolo (this was a dancing game)".

(Rafeldelaghetto then wrote: "
Yasss are you from Chicago? I remember all of those." 


Later in that discussion Zazu wrote: "
Yes, I am! Where ever I made friends in Chicago, we did all of these."
-snip-
WARNING: Some examples and rhymes on that discussion thread contain profanity, sexually explicit references, and the n word.

****
Cleveland, Ohio
"Check"
Shelly H. (African American female, Cleveland, Ohio, mid 1980s., collected by Azizi Powell in the early 2000s.

****
Denver, Colorado
"Ola Ola"* in The Games Black Girls Play by Kyra D. Gaunt, (page 78) contributor Arielle [1995]
-snip-
This is a version of the cheer "Hula Hula", (multiple same/similar examples in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area and elsewhere throughout the United States)

****
Detroit, Michigan
"Hula Hula (version beginning with "Step, step, take a step"
-Cookie, http://thechocolatetease.blogspot.com/2013/03/childhood-rhymes.html, March 11, 2013

****
E, F
Elkhart, Indiana:
"Introduce Yourself Roll Call"; from Sonjala; memories of the late 1970s and early 1980s; collected by Azizi Powell (multiple same/similar examples in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area and elsewhere throughout the United States)

All: Chick – boom Ah Ah chick a boom roll call
First Person: Hey Sonji
Second Person: Yeah baby
First Person: Hey sonjie
Second Person: Yeah baby
First Person: Introduce your self
Second Person: Right on
First Person: Introduce your self
Second Person: Right on my name is sonji
First Person: Check
Second Person: I like to sing
First Person: Check
Second Person: And when I sing
First Person: Check
Second Person: I do my thing
All: OOOOHHHH roll call Chick a boom, ah ah chick a boom roll call

Then each person is “called” one at a time. They make up a rhyme about what they like and the cheer repeats itself {African American girls; Late 70’s – early 80’s Elkhart Indiana}
-Sonjala A. (African American female); collected by Azizi Powell, 3/15/2008


Also, "Tab" from Sonjala; memories of the late 1970s and early 1980s; collected by Azizi Powell
-snip-
Elkhart, Indiana is about two hours by car from Chicago, Illinois.

****
Fayetteville, North Carolina
"I TT I TI TI" [cheer title]
"I live in fayettville,nc i am 9 my cuzin taught me this

I TT I TI TI Break it down I TT I TI TI Break it down My name
is Euraja and I'm the ist Cheerleader And when I break
it down I break it I break it to the ground And when I get
up I don't get stuck And there aint nothing to it yall Can't
do it."
-aja; 10/4/2008, cocojams.com
-snip-
cocojams.com was my multi-page cultural website. That website was active from 2000 to Nov. 2014 when I deactivated it. A number of rhymes and cheers that were featured on that page came from children. pre-teens, and teens since there was an easy to use page for examples that people could fill out without an email address and only using their first name (and hopefully other demographics such as age and city/state). I reposted many of the rhyme and cheer examples that were on cocojams.com on my cocojams2 blog https://cocojams2.blogspot.com

****
Fort Worth, Texas (Tarrant)
from CBWELLS26, 1/2/2001, http://www.greekchat.com/gcforums/showthread.php?t=4123&page=4 childhood chants and games

cheer name: "Suffocated Lady"

..."Does anyone remember these two songs?
[first one "Little Sally Walker")....

"the second one all the girls would get in a circle and chant & clap

Suffocated lady, Suffocated la-dy(this is said twice), then the first girl would sing

I'm a bad bad girl from a bad bad town, it take a thousand n%$%@* just to hold me down, if you don't like my apples don't you pick em (not them) off my tree cause I'm after you're lover and he's after me. (this is repeated until every girl in the circle gets her turn)"...

****

G, H,
Houston, Texas
From Apples On A Stick: The Folklore Of Black Children by Barbara Michels and Bettye White (1983; p. 14);
"Hollywood Rock Swinging"- (multiple examples same/similar in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area and elsewhere throughout the United States).

**
"Hula Hula"- (multiple examples same/similar in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area and elsewhere throughout the United States).

****
I, J

****
K, L
Los Angeles, California
Tether ball (three examples)
1) Milan W; November 18, 2009, cocojams.com
-snip-
Milan W added this comment to her version of this cheer
"Little black girls at Windsor Hills Elementary School in Los Angeles, CA during the early 1990s chanted this rhythmic taunt in a circle on the playground"
**
2) bitsy196; http://www.greekchat.com/gcforums/showthread.php?t=4123&page=4 ; “remember when”’-06-25-2003
-snip-
bitsy196 prefaced this example with this comment: ..."I remember one that surprisingly (sp?) has not been said.I grew up in LA and I am sure this made across the US"...

**
3) "You Know I shake The Best"
-Nikkole Salter, 2015 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KfzHL_1PdbY "Let's Discuss: Black Girl Childhood Hand Games and Sing Songs" [comment]

**
"Tetherball"
-Nikkole Salter, 2015 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KfzHL_1PdbY "Let's Discuss: Black Girl Childhood Hand Games and Sing Songs" [comment]
"This is an L.A. perspective:... This first one is not so much a hand game as much as it is a cipher:  You know, I shake the best, hey, hey/ You know, from the east to the west!  My name's (enter your name) and my favorite color's black (or whatever color you like) / I took your man and you won't get him back, hey hey / You know, I shake the best, hey, hey/ You know, from the east to the west! (and every person gets a chance, state your color and your bravado in rhyme)... 

Then there was this other call & response cipher (which I don't hear too many people mention outside my generation and region)... Tether ball, tether ball/Oosha, asha!/Tether ball, tether ball/Oosha, asha!  My name's (enter your name) (tether ball), super cool, (tether ball) You mess with me (tether ball) You's a fool (tether ball)  I got this man (tether ball) On my mind (tether ball) You mess with him (tether ball) Your butt is straight up mine.  Oooh.  Tether ball, tether ball/Oosha, Asha! etc.  -- You make up your own rhyme of bravado..."

**
Super Fly Girl 
-Westside Jaguars (Los Angeles, California), posted by LABELmeCUTE on Jul 31, 2010, https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=68&v=aearuurOh_w
-snip-
This updated version of  the "Fly Girl" cheer is performed by a cheerleading squad.  Gymnastic movements are performed by some of the cheerleaders during their solo.  

****
M. N.
Memphis, Tennessee
"Hula Hula"
Who now Who now, Now who think they bad
Who now Who now, Now who think they bad
I do
I know I'm bad cause Afro's my name
Uh Huh
Football's my game
Uh Huh
Black is my color dont u worry about my lover
Um she think she bad
Bad bad super bad, bad enough I know I'm bad
Um she think she tough
Tough tough super tough tough enough to kick your butt
Um she think shes fine
Fine enough to blow Eric's mind
Um she think she's cute
Cute enough to steal your dude
-Afrochic (Memphis, Tennessee), http://www.greekchat.com/gcforums/showthread.php?t=31403&page=5 Old School Chants, 03-30-2003

****
Midway, Georgia 
"Jiggalow"
This is how it goes in Midway, Georgia.) Jiggalo, Jig, Jigggg----alooooo. Jiggalo, Jig, Jigggg----alooooo. Group: Hey _____! Person: Yeah? Group: Are you ready? Person: For what? Group: To Jig! Person: Jig what? Group: Jigalooo! Jigalooo! Person: Well, my back aches My bra (belt, pants, Dickies) to tight. My booty shake from left to right. With the sky up high And my J's down low This the way I Jiggalo (does a cute, short dance) Group: Well, her back aches Her bra (belt, pants, Dickies) to tight. Her booty shake from left to right. Wit the sky up high And her J's down low And this the way she Jiggalo (copies their cute, short dance) (Repeats with new person)
-Brianna (Midway,Georgia); 9/26/2008, cocojams.com

**** 
Milton, Florida
from kisses, 1/1/2001, http://www.greekchat.com/gcforums/showthread.php?t=4123&page=3 childhood chants and games

"Does anyone remeber the cheers we used to do?

Really uh uh really uh uh

Really my name is kisses
really my sign is sropio

say what
scorpio
say what

cause I'm more than a dollar I can make your boyfriend holler cause I'm sweet and fine like a bottle of wine cause I'm a pro

say what

a P R O
say what
I'm a triple P triple R triple O
a sexy pro.

****
New York City, New York (East Brooklyn)
"We Are The Ridgewood girls", -Yasmin H., (Latina), via email to cocojams.com, 2/25/04 (memories of East Brooklyn, New York, in the late 1980s.)

**
"Rock The Boat"
Rock the boat,
Rock, rock the boat
[repeat]
My name is Yasmin (rock the boat)
I know I'm fine (rock the boat)
Just like my sign (rock the boat)
My sign is Leo
I go bang-bang choo choo train
Wind me up and I do my thing
Reeses pieces butter cup
Don't mess with me, cause I'll mess you up,
Rock the boat, rock rock the boat...
-Yasmin H. (Latina female; memories of East Brooklyn, New York, in the late 1980s), 2/25/04
-snip-
The words in parenthesis were chanted by the other members of the cheerleading squad.

This cheer was found in multiple cities.

**
New York City (Brooklyn, New York)
"A Bull Dog"
-Mellie Grant, Jun 24, 2017, https://www.lipstickalley.com/threads/black-girl-rhymes-what-was-yours-growing-up.1196979/page-2 
-snip-
WARNING: Some of the examples and comments on that lipstickalley.com discussion thread contain profanity, sexually explicit content, and/or the "n word".

Mellie Grant noted that she was from Brooklyn [New York]. This version of "A Bull Dog" includes the line "And then you disco like Sisquo". That referent to Sisquo helps date this version. c https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sisq%C3%B3
"SisQó), is an American singer, songwriter, record producer, dancer and actor. He is most prominently known for "The Thong Song," his membership in Dru Hill, and has also released solo material. Sisqo's successful debut solo album, Unleash the Dragon (1999), included the hit singles "Thong Song"[4] and "Incomplete"....

Years active : 1995–present"
-snip-
Therefore this version of that cheer couldn't have been chanted until 1995.
 
The exact same version of "A Bull Dog" cheer was posted by dijah.love (Location: New York); Apr 25 2008; http://forum.blackhairmedia.com/lil-girls-hand-games_topic128043_page5.html 
This may have been the same person.

I've added a comment from that blackhairmedia.com discussion to the comment section of this pancocojams post. That comment mentions "doing steps" when she was 8 years old.

I collected a version of this cheer that doesn't include the name "Sisquo" from three African American girls in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 2000.

I also have come across another example of "Bull Dog" and a very similar example called "Panthers". Neither of those examples include the name Sisquo and they are given without any demographics.  

WARNING: Some of the examples and comments on that blackhair.com discussion thread contain profanity, sexually explicit content, and/or the "n word".

**

"A Boom Boom Tick" [Read the entry below for Washington, D.C.]

**
"Hollywood Go Swinging"
reference to a "Hollywood Swinging" cheer is included in this New York Times article: 
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/19/nyregion/thecity/19jump.html "The Jump Rope Girls, 20 Years On" By Susan Hartman, Oct. 17, 2008

[photo caption: "The Parkside girls in 1988 — Elbe Vasquez, far left, Peachie Navarro, and Jackie and Steffie Rendon"]

Here's the only line of that cheer that is given in that article:
"Oh 
, look at that body, ain’t it fine?” they sang to Jackie in a cheer titled “Hollywood Go Swinging.”

That article may refer in general to other foot stomping cheers without using that term.

****
O, P

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
From Recess Battles: Playing Fighting, and Storytelling by Anna R. Beresin (University Press of Mississippi, Jackson, 2010, page 104-105, in the section of that book whose sub-title is "Steps"), African American girls, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)

"Fly Girl" (1999) (multiple same/similar examples in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area and elsewhere throughout the United States)

**
"Hollywood" (1992) (multiple same/similar examples in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area and elsewhere throughout the United States)

**
"I Work" [1992]

**
"Pump It Up" (1992) (multiple same/similar examples in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area and elsewhere throughout the United States)

**
"Shoo shoo Sharida" (1992)

**
"Telephone" (1992) (A similar cheer is included in a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area version of "Cheerleader"; also examples of "Telephone" found elsewhere throughout the United States)

**

"A Boom Boom Tick" [An example of this cheer is given below for Washington, D.C.]

**
"Really" (1992)
This cheer was "really" popular in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area in the early 1990s. I've collected versions from the greekchat.com website, from lipstick alley.com, and from cocojams.com (all without locations and decade when the cheer was performed).

****
Also, from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
"Jump In The Car" (as well as a version of the cheer "Telephone" that includes profanity & sexually explicit references that the commenter notes that she said when she was 9 years old.)

Here's that version of "Jump In The Car": 

"jump in da car...
step on the gas
move to the side
and let (ur name here) pass
she said a oooih uhhh look atr that booty
oooh uuuuhh ain't she fly
ooohh ahhh look at that booty
wish she was mine
-datbeyoncehair (Location Philly), Apr 25 2008; http://forum.blackhairmedia.com/lil-girls-hand-games_topic128043_page4.html Lil Girls...Hand Games!
-snip-
WARNING: Some examples and comments on that discussion thread contain profanity and/or sexually explicit references..

-snip-
Versions of "Jump In The Car" cheers were found in multiple cities.

**
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (and some nearby communities)
Most of the examples of cheers in my collection are from the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area, including those which are noted as such in the parenthesis in this post.

Here's a few of the foot stomping cheers that were found in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area which are also found in at least one other African American community if not in more than one other African American communities throughout the USA:


"Bang Bang Choo Choo Train"
-snip-
"Bang Bang Choo Choo Train" is a VERY widely known recreational composition that is performed as a hand clap rhyme and as a cheerleader cheer. Both the hand clap rhyme versions and cheer versions have basically the same text, but it I believe that "Bang Bang Choo Choo Train" is usually performed by some Black Americans and most other Americans as a unison chanted hand clap routine. Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2015/08/bang-bang-choo-choo-train-rhyme-cheer.html for more information about this rhyme/cheer.

**
"Candy Girl"
-snip-
This was posted as a cheer (Los Angeles, Cal.) in the Black Greek sorority women's "remember when" discussion and was also mentioned as a handclap rhyme in The Games Black Girls Play

**
"Disco"
-snip-
This cheer includes the line " what you gonna do when they come for you?" I collected it in Pittsburgh and it was also posted to cocojams.com (no location given). Of course, the person posted it could also have been from Pittsburgh area.

**
"Get Down"
-snip-
In this cheer, the group commands a soloist to "show me how you get down". That line is also given as "Show me how to get down". ("Get down" meaning - to dance really well, to dance in a funky, seductive manner.) I first documented this cheer in the mid 1980s from my daughter and her friends. I collected examples of this cheer in Pittsburgh with almost the same exact words up to around 2006 (I stopped directly collecting recreational rhymes around 2008). An example of this cheer with similar wording was posted on cocojams.com with no location.

**
"Really"
This cheer was "really" popular in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area in the early 1990s. I've collected versions from the greekchat.com website, from lipstick alley.com, and from cocojams.com (all without locations and decade when the cheer was performed).

**
"Jay Jay Kukalay"
Soloist #1: Jay Jay Kukalay
Group: Jay Jay Kukalay
Soloist #1: Salesah lahndah
Group: Salesah lahndah
Soloist #1: Step back, Shalanda (or back, back Shalonda)
Group: Step back, Shalanda
Soloist #1: Oosh, my lover boy!
Group: Oosh, my lover boy!
Soloist #1: I’m callin on,
I’m callin on
I’m callin on - Rhonda
-T.M.P. (African American female; from her memories of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in the mid 1980s); Also collected by Azizi Powell; in 1998 (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Garfield- the same collection neighborhood as in the mid 1980s)

I also collected a version of this cheer from Washington. D. C. entitled "J. J. Cool Aid" (This is how the contributor wrote this title.) Read my notes about this cheer in the Washington, D. C. entry in this post.  

**
"Gigalo"
I collected foot stomping cheer versions of "Gigalo" in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania ("Gigalo" is also performed as a hand clap rhyme). Here's a large excerpt of a comment that I wrote in November 25, 2007 on http://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=63097 Folklore: Do kids still do clapping rhymes? -Note: The words in brackets are what I added today to help clarify what I meant by what I wrote in 2007.

[...]

"Gigalo"
All:
Gig ah lo-o
Gig a lo-o
Gig ah lo-o
Gig gig a lo-o
Group:
Hey, Kayla *
Kayla:
What?
Group:
Are you ready to gig?
Kayla:
Gig what?
Group:
Gigalo
Kayla:
My hands up high
My feet down low
And this is the way
I gig a lo
Group:
Her hands up high
Her feet down low
And this is the way she gigalos

* substitute the soloist's name or nickname

{repeat from the beginning with the next soloist, and continue until everyone in the group has a turn as soloist}

Girls stand in a horizontal line. While chanting, they step to a percussive, continual stomp clap/ stomp stomp/clap beat. When the girl who is the soloist responds "What?", she says it with attitude {like "Why are you bothering me to ask a question?"}. When she says "My hands up high my feet down low" She raises her hands and sashays down to the ground, in a sensual manner. When she says "This is the way I gigalo", she does a fancy step to the beat. The group then imitates her foot movement. The cheer then repeats again with the next soloist whose name is called and she does her soloist step.

Btw, recently, I've seen the soloist move to the front of the horizontal line when it's her turn to do her soloist {this does not mean moving in front of the other performers in the center of the line-but just moving in front of where she was standing}. When her soloist turn ends, she moves back to the line. Also btw, the girls don't stand in consecutive order 1 through 4 for instance. And the order of soloist {who is first, second, etc often depends on who calls out those numbers first at the beginning of this informal "play" activity}.

[Similar to] handclap rhymes, performers [are] {usually but not always girls as young as 5 years and usually no more than 12 years old}. [The girls basically] stand in [the same] place. The emphasis is on chanting while executing hand clap and hand slap partner routines. These routines can also be done with three people or four {two sets of two partners}. There are also larger group handclaps, but those are often lightly competitive while partner/three and four person handclaps aren't.

In contrast, foot stomping cheers are all about the creation of bass sounding percussive sounds made by the feet and also the hands and body patting. These synchronized, chreographed routines are performed by girls about the same age as those doing handclaps, but usually at the upper end of that age group. While foot stomping routines include handclapping, there are no partners-you clap your own hands and never touch the body of anyone else. The performers {like handclap routines, usually girls} basically stand in place or if they do move, they don't move far from their starting place, and they quickly return back to it.

These foot stomping routines are very much like the African American art of steppin."...


****
Q, R

****
S, T

San Francisco, California
"Introduce Yourself"
group: Hey (name) individual: yeah group: introduce yourself
individual: no way group: introduce yourself ind.: ok...
my name is (name) group: yeah ind.: and i am proud
group: yeah ind.: thats why i cheer group: yeah
ind.: so very loud, so check me out
-Janice, (San Francisco, California) 10/11/2006, cocojams.com
-snip-
I've found multiple examples of "introduce Yourself" cheers in other USA cities, including in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and surrounding area.)

****
U, V

****
W, X

Washington, D.C
"Cheering Is my Game" -1976 Washington, D. C. school girls, in Band 3 "Cheerleaders" of 1978 vinyl record "Mother Hippletoe"; (multiple examples the same/similar in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area)

and

"Hollywood Now Swingin/Dynomite" -1976 Washington, D. C. school girls, in Band 3 "Cheerleaders" of 1978 vinyl record "Mother Hippletoe" ("Hollywood Swinging"- (multiple examples the same/similar in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area)
-snip-
Band 3 "Cheerleading" of the 1978 vinyl record "Mother Hippletoe" includes four examples of what the author of the record notes calls "cheers". Two of these examples* ("Cheering Is My Game" and "Hollywood Keeps Swingin/Dynomite") have the textual structure that I consider a signature characteristic of "foot stomping cheers". These are the earliest examples of foot stomping cheers that I've found. I've collected multiple examples of both of those cheers among African American in various parts of the United States.

Here are the words to Cheering Is My Game:
Dn Dn Dn Dn Dn (Twice)
CALL: Barbara. Barbara is my name.
RESPONSE: Dn Dn Dn Dn Dn (similarly)
Cheering is my game.
Freddy. Freddy was my man.
But Ken is my main man.
Dn Dn Dn Dn Dn (Twice)
Cheer continues until each girl announces her name and her boyfriend’s name.
-"Old Mother Hippletoe, Rural and Urban Children's Songs"; Barbara Borum and other Washington, D.C., schoolgirls, vocals.
-snip-
"Cheering Is My Game" is an early version of the "Cheerleader" cheer. I collected a rather basic mid 1980s "Cheerleader" from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and a much longer version of "Cheerleader" also in the mid 1980s from from Rankin, Pennsylvania which is about twenty minutes from one part of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

"Cheerleader" is a form of the "introduce yourself" subset of foot stomping cheers. The first Bring It On high school cheerleader movie (in 2000) featured a couple of "introduce yourself/"roll call" cheers. The third movie in that franchise, Bring It On:All Or Nothing (2006), includes "Shabooya Roll Call", a VERY widely known example of an "introduce yourself". In the cafeteria scene ofn that movie, the high school cheerleaders performed an (albeit) exaggerated form of a step routine to the "Shaboya Roll Call" cheer. However, it should be noted that a version of "Shabooya Roll Call" was chanted by African American men and boys in a scene in Spike Lee's fictional 1996 Get On The Bus movie about the Million Man March on Washington, D.C.

For the record, a young Black woman I met in the Washington, D. C. area told me that she and other teenagers "said a cheer" that had a word like "Shabooya" before Spike Lee's movie, but she that was the only thing she remembered about that cheer.

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2016/06/the-right-rhyming-pattern-for-shabooya.html for a pancocojams post about "Shabooya Roll Call".

**
Here are the words to Hollywood Now Swingin / Dynomite
HOLLYWOOD NOW SWINGING/DYNOMITE
Hollywood now swingin'! (4 times)
CALL: Name is Nita.
RESPONSE: Hollywood now swingin'!
Similarly
I know how to swing.
Everytime I swing.
Stevie come around.
CALL: He popped me once!
He popped me twice!
All I felt was -dynomite!
RESPONSE: Dynomite, dynomite! (Twice)
Dynomite!
CALL: Here she is.
RESPONSE: Dynomite!
Similarly
Foxy Brown!
You mess with me,
I'll shoot you down!
Down, down,
To the ground,
Up, up,
CALL: Just out of luck!
RESPONSE: Dynomite, dynomite! (Twice)
-Barbara Borum and other Washington, D.C. schoolgirls, recorded in 1976 in Washington, D. C.; record notes by Kate Rinzler, "Old Mother Hippletoe, Rural and Urban Children's Songs"
-snip-
This versions combines two stand alone cheers. The "Hollywood Keeps Swingin" cheer is the one that is very widely found throughout the USA.

**
Other Washington D.Cexamples:

"J. J. Cool Aid"*, from a White American woman living in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania who indicated that she grew up in predominately Black neighborhood of Washington, DC; She performed this cheer for me in the 1980s in response to a relatively informal, voluntary  written survey of rhymes that people remember from their childhood (Game song/Cheer survey of co-workers, Family Health Council, Pittsburgh, PA, 1999 by Azizi Powell.) (one exampleof J. J. Cool Aid is "Jay Jay Kukalay" that I collected in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.)
-snip-
*This was that women's spelling of that title. I've no doubt that the source of "J.J. Cool Aid"  and "Jay Jay Kukalay" is the Ghanaian children's song "Kye Kye Kule" often given as Che Che Kulay" or similar spellings.

**
"Chocolate City", collected in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Lillian Taylor camp from a girl who lives in Washington D>C and attended Lillian Taylor camp (Pittsburgh area) with her Pittsburgh cousin; in 1990. [Lillian Taylor Camp was attended by mostly Black girls & boys ages 5-12 years from various neighborhoods throughout Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. My daughter (TMP) was a camp counselor who audio-taped a number of cheers that the girls knew (She didn't teach these cheers to them).

**
"A Boom Boom Tick"
Hey Posse, YEAH break it down with the carwarsh
Yeah I said, A BOOM BOOM TICK, TICK A BOOM TICK (x2) (while doing the carwash dance)
Hey Posse, YEAH break it down with the Unabomber
yeah I said, A BOOM BOOM TICK, TICK A BOOM TICK (x2)

I actually think this one was strictly a DC thing.
-_ConcreteRose, Aug 09 2012, http://forum.blackhairmedia.com/i-went-downtown-to-get-a-stick-of-butter_topic345408_page4.html
-snip-
On that same date, another blogger with the screen name Wynter responded to that comment by writing "we use to sing this in elementary school and Im from NYC".

****
Y, Z

Ypsilanti, Michigan
"Jigalow"
In The Games Black Girls Play by Kyra D. Gaunt, (pages 80- 82) contributors: Jasmine and Stephanie, mid 1990s [?]
-snip-
This version of "Jigalow" combines "Jigalow" with "Introduce Yourself". The examples of "Jigalow" ("Gigalo") that I collected from the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania were/are? performed as handclap/imitative rhymes. "Jigalow" rhyme/cheer appears to have been widely known in the USA. Versions of "Introduce Yourself" cheer were also widely known throughout the USA.

****
OTHER DEMOGRAPHICS (STATES) 

Connecticut: cheer title "Hula Hula"
"Hula Hula" 
Hula Hula
Who thinks she's bad now
Hula Hula
Who thinks she's bad)

I think I'm bad
'Cause Shelly's my name
Black is my color
And love is my game

(Ooh, She think she bad)
[posturing] Ooh, I know I'm bad.

(Ooh, she think she bad)

Ooh, I know I'm bad

(Ooh, she think she bad)
Chile, go kiss my ass (or “Chile, your breath is bad” or “Chile go take a bath”)

repeat rhyme from the beginning.
-bublackberry (African American woman); Connecticut; emailed to Azizi Powell, 11/11/05 .

****
Eastern North Carolina. cheer title "L-O-V-E"
I am a 25 year old African American woman from Eastern North Carolina.

The section on the chant L-O-V-E caught my attention we used to do this

when I was younger. We would stand in a circle and we would clap our hands and stomp our feet sort of tapping out the words L- O-V-E.

Group: L-O-V-E, L-O-V-E, L-O-V, L-O-V, L-O-V-E

First Person: Erica's my name love is my game I got this boy on my mind

he's looking real fine he calls me his girl his number one pearl

Then you move on to the next person and they repeat the same thing

only with their name in place.

-no name or date recorded, cocojams.com
-snip-
This example was posted on my cocojams.com website but I neglected to save the contributor's name and the date that it was aadded to that site.

****
Louisiana (state): cheer title: "Chili Chili Bang Bang"

We used to do a chant where we all made a circle and somebody stood in the middle. The words in parenthesis are what the person in the middle would say:

Chili chili bang bang
Let me see you do yo' thang,
(I cant!), Why not?,
(I just can't), Why not?,
(My back hurt, my bra too tight,
my hips shake to the left, to the right,
to the left and to the right! Hey!)

And the girl in the middle had to move her hips as she sang. It was sooooo funny then because we all thought we were FINE anyway! ROTFL!!
-MsAnn (African American female; Louisiana) http://www.greekchat.com/gcforums/showthread.php?t=4123&page=3 Childhood chants and games......; December 30, 2000
-snip-
Versions of "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang" are also performed as a hand clap rhyme.

****
Virginia (state): cheer title: "Fly Girl"

FLY GIRL 
Fly girl!
Fly girl
Fly girl
Flyyyyyyyyyyyyyy girl

Fly girl
Fly girl
Flyyyyyyyyyyyyyy girl

Well my name is VACHICK and I'm and fly girl
It takes 100 boys to rock my world ( I should not have been cheering about this!)
I fly like butterfly, sting like a Bee
And that's why they call me SE-XY!!
-Virginia chick, http://www.lipstickalley.com/showthread.php/43158-Hood-Cheers, 8/18/2016
-snip-
Based on the number of examples I have come across with and without geographic locations*, the "Fly Girl" appears to have been a popular foot stomping cheer.   

*Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania city and some surrounding communities was one of the cities where this exact same version of "Fly Girl" cheer was performed. 


reference to "the South"
"I can faintly remember but one of them went something like

1) my name is strawflower (friends: yea)
im really fine (yea)
I'm from the south (yea)
And Ill blow your mind (yea)


It was done with a LOT of sass
-Strawflower, June 25, 2017, https://www.lipstickalley.com/threads/black-girl-rhymes-what-was-yours-growing-up.1196979/page-2 Black girl rhymes what was yours growing up?

WARNING: Some examples and comments on this lipsticstickalley.com discussion thread contain profanity and/or sexually explicit references. 

****
The Midwest: cheer titles:
"Roll Call"

"Hump-dee-dump"
Here's that comment (without an example of "Down Down Baby" that was also shared.)

"Is the Midwest up in hea? I see some of y'all!

1) Roll call check me out, roll call check me out

My name is ____, check

I go to school, check

I know I'm cool, check

Cause I can turn around, touch the ground, get back up and party down. *We said this as we were doing it. My party down was usually a variation of the cabbage patch with lots of 'tude.*

[...]

Hump-dee-dump (2x)

My name is _____. Dee-dump

I go to school. Dee-dump

I know I'm cool. Dee-dump

Cause I'm as fast as a dollar and nobody can make me holla but my man.*Said with 'tude and a body roll when we say man.*
-Double Platinum, June 25, 2017,  https://www.lipstickalley.com/threads/black-girl-rhymes-what-was-yours-growing-up.1196979/page-3 Black girl rhymes what was yours growing up?

WARNING: Some examples and comments on this lipsticstickalley.com discussion thread contain profanity and/or sexually explicit references. 

-snip-
The asterisks were included in this comment, but no explanation was given for them. " 'tude" is an informal short form of the word "attitude".

The inclusion of the "Hump-dee-dump" cheer means that it's likely that both of these cheers are from the 1990s (since the Hump-dee-dump" cheer almost certainly was inspired by the 1990 Hip Hop tune "The Humpty Dance" by Digital Underground.

****
ADDENDUM #1: 
Comments About Sharing Demographics On My Cocojams Website
Cocojams.com was a multi-page cultural website that I founded and hosted from December 2001 to October 2014.  

it appears that many children and pre-teens submitted rhymes, cheers, and other children's recreational material on that cocojams site. In part that was because that website included an easy to fill out content submission form that needed no email address,

Along with their first name and last name initial, cocojams.com contributors were asked to share their city/state or share their nationality if they lived outside the United States. To protect the contributors' privacy, I only published the contributor's first name and (if they gave their last name) the initial for their last name. Although I requested racial/ethnic and other demographic information, few contributors to my cocojams.com site included that information.

The largest number of people who shared demographic information shared the city that they live in. The smallest number of people who shared demographic information shared information about their race/ethnicity (with "ethnicity" usually meaning Latino/a in the USA).

****
ADDENDUM #2- Pancocojams Editor's Note About Kyra D. Gaunt Made About Black Girls' Cheers

[This is a comment that I wrote in the discussion thread for the now deleted 2021 pancocojams post about Demographic Information Of Foot Stmpin Cheers

In her 2006 book "The Games Black Girls Play..." Kyra D. Gaunt wrote:
[page 183]
"What was fascinating, which I was unable to research and include in this book, was how many of LaShonda's versions of cheers [she remembered cheers and not handclapping games or double-dutch rhymes] involved a great deal of individual improvisation within the collective expression of many chants. it was the first time that I had observed this phenomenon, the invention of vocal expression in the context of social performance of a girls' game. Does that suggest a change in the transmission or performance practice of girls games?....Was Chicago in the early 1980s somewhat a different locale of expression than outside Detroit, where I collected games in 1994-95? This can only be left for further study."
-snip-
I believe that Kyra D. Gaunt is correct in her speculation that what I refer to as "foot stomping cheers" and what she refers to as "cheers" or "scolds" mark a change in the transmission and performance of girls games in that these examples are a relatively new style of children's (mostly girls)' recreational activity.

I also believe that Kyra D. Gaunt was probably correct that, for some reason, examples of these cheers were performed early on - i.e in the late 1970s and early 1980s- in certain African American communities throughout the United States and not in others. I'm sure that one way these cheers traveled throughout the nation before the internet, was by people (family members/friends) sharing them with others. For example, in the 1990s, a version of the Washington D. C. cheer "Chocolate City, came to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania via a girl who attended a Pittsburgh area summer camp while she was visiting her Pittsburgh cousins.

****
Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome.

Names Of Cities, States Or Nations In Children's Hand Clap Rhymes & Other Recreational Rhymes (Complete Reprint)

Edited by Azizi Powell

This pancocojams post is a complete reprint of a May 2023 pancocojams post* with very minor changes.

This post presents a small sample of English language children's recreational rhymes that include the names of cities, states, nations, and/or other geographical places.

Additional examples of some of these rhymes are found in other pancocojams posts and elsewhere online.

The content of this post is presented for folkloric, cultural, and recreational purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to all those who are quoted in this post.
-snip-
*That 2023 pancocojams post is still available on this blog, but includes no comments at the time of this publication (April 11, 2026 at 11:13 AM EDT) 

By "recreational rhymes" I mean jump rope, hand clap, rhymes, and other playground  rhymes. I don't mean "Mother Goose" nursery rhymes such as "London Bridge Is Falling Down" or singing games such as "We're Going To Kentucky".

This collection also doesn't include any rhymes that mention nationalities such as "Spanish dancer" or "Dutch girl". 

****
RHYME EXAMPLES
Rhymes in this collection are given under the first letter for their title or the first letter of the first word in the line that begins that rhyme. 

Italics are used for the first time that the name of a particular city, state, or nation is mentioned in each rhyme.  

A , B

ALL THE GIRLS IN FRANCE (Fragment)
All the girls in France
Do the hoochie koochie dance
And they don't wear pants
When they do the hoochie dance...
- Azizi Powell's memories of childhood in Atlantic City, New Jersey in the 1950s
-snip-
Read the "There's A Place In France" examples below.

****
A MY NAME IS
A my name is Alice
And my husband's name is Arthur,
We come from Alabama,
Where we sell artichokes.

B my name is Barney
And my wife's name is Bridget,
We come from Brooklyn,
Where we sell bicycles.

C my name is _________
And my husband's name is ___________
We come from __________
Where we sell ___________.

(Continue throughout the alphabet)
-Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher,https://buyjumpropes.net/resources/jump-rope-rhymes-songs-buyjumpropesnet/

****
A SAILOR WENT TO SEA (Example #1)
A sailor went to sea sea sea To see what he could see see see But all that he could see see see Was the bottom of the deep blue sea sea sea

A sailor went to China** To see what he could China But all that he could China Was the bottom of the deep blue China **every time you say China, put your hands together and bow.

A sailor went to Texas*** to see what he could Texas but all that he could Texas was the bottom of the deep blue Texas! *** Every time you say Texas, move your right arm around in the air, like twirling a lasso

A sailor went to doo-wop, doo-wop,**** to see what he could doo-wop, doo-wop, but all that he could doo-wop, doo-wop, was the bottom of the deep blue doo-wop, doo-wop!!! **** Every time you say doo-wop, doo-wop, shake your butt like you're dancing."
-Aug 12 2003, https://archive.homeschool.co.uk/jumprope-songs/sailor.html
-snip-
This example is reformatted to enhance it's readability. 

The suggested action for China may be considered stereotypical, but it's a big improvement over the offensive slant eye gestures that are said to accompany the word "China" in some versions of this children's rhyme.

****
A SAILOR WENT TO SEA (Example #2)
(Australian Version)

Action Song

1. A sailor went to sea, sea, sea
To see what he could see, see, see,
But all that he could see, see, see
Was the bottom of the deep blue sea, sea, sea.

2. A sailor went to chop, chop, chop
To see what he could chop, chop, chop,
But all that he could chop, chop, chop
Was the bottom of the deep blue chop, chop, chop

3. A sailor went to knee, knee, knee
To see what he could knee, knee, knee,
But all that he could knee, knee, knee
Was the bottom of the deep blue knee, knee, knee.

4. A sailor went to toe, toe, toe
To see what he could toe, toe, toe,
But all that he could toe, toe, toe
Was the bottom of the deep blue toe, toe, toe.

5. A sailor went to Timbuktu
To see what he could Timbuktu,
But all that he could Timbuktu
Was the bottom of the deep blue Timbuktu. 
https://www.mamalisa.com/?t=es&p=58
-snip-
Timbuktu is a city in Mali, West Africa. 

****

AT THE BATTLE OF WATERLOO
At the battle of Waterloo
This is what the soldiers do:
Left, right, left, right     (* Jumps on correct foot *)
All the way to Timbuktu. 
-
Abrahams (1969);https://mudcat.org/jumprope/jumprope_display_all.cfm

****
AUNT JENNY DIED
Soloist:
Aunt Jenny died. .
Group:
How did she die?
Soloist:
She died like this. [The soloist makes a funny pose such as raising one of her legs and raising her arm at the same time & freezing in place.]
Group:
She died like this. [The group tries to exactly imitate the soloist's pose]
Soloist:
She died like that. [The soloist strikes a new pose]
Group:
She died like that.
[The group tries to exactly imitate the soloist's pose. The soloist and the group repeat the same sequence with the mention of other relatives until "momma" is mentioned]
Soloist:
My momma livin'.
Group:
Where she livin'.
Soloist & group in unison:
Well she lives in a place called Tennessee.
Jump up Tenna Tennessee [The entire group performs the movements as indicated by the words]
Jump back Tena Tennesse
Jump in Tena Tennesse
Jump out Tena Tennessee
Well I've never been to college
I never been to school.
But when it comes to boogie [On the word "boogie", while still standing in place, the entire group does a hip shaking dance movement] The girls don't have to do the exact same movement]
I can boogie like a fool.
You go in, out, side to side.
You go in, out, side to side.
-African American children's rhyme, collected from African American female Barbara Ray (memories of her childhood in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1950s); collected by Azizi Powell, 1998 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

****
AWAY DOWN EAST
Away down east.
Away down west.
Away down Alabama.
The only girl
That I love best
Her name is Suzianna.

I took her to the ball
Late one night.
And sat her down to supper.
The table fell
And she fell too
And stuck her nose in butter.

The butter, the butter
The holy margarine.
Two black eyes
And a jelly nose.
All the rest painted green
-Abrahams (1969);https://mudcat.org/jumprope/jumprope_display_all.cfm


****
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN WENT TO FRANCE
Benjamin Franklin went to France
To teach the ladies how to dance.
First the heel, and then the toe,
Spin around and out you go.
-Adele Greil, https://buyjumpropes.net/resources/jump-rope-rhymes-songs-buyjumpropesnet/

****
BETTY BETTY STUMPED HER TOE
Betty, Betty stumped her toe
On the way to Mexico.
On the way back
She broke her back
Sliding on a railroad track.
Source: Abrahams (1969)
- Abrahams 1969, https://mudcat.org/jumprope/jumprope_display_all.cfm

****
C, D

CHARLIE CHAPLIN
Charlie Chaplin came to Duluth
To have a dentist pull his tooth.
First he hollered then he yelled
Then he pulled the emergency bell.

Charlie Chaplin has big feet.
Thinks he owns the whole darn street.
If that street were made of glass
Charlie would fall and break his ---
Don't get excited. Don't get alarmed.
Charlie would fall and break his ARM!

Charlie Chaplin went to France
To teach the ladies how to dance.

Charlie Chaplin washing up
Broke a saucer and a cup.

Charlie Chaplin went to war.
When he came back
His pants were tore.

Source: Abrahams (1969), https://mudcat.org/jumprope/jumprope_display_all.cfm
-snip-
Duluth is a city in Minnesota, USA.

****
CHARLIE CHAPLIN WENT TO FRANCE
Charlie Chaplin went to France,
To teach the ladies the hula dance.
First on the heels,
Then on the toes,
Around and around and around you go.
Salute to the Captain,
Bow to the Queen,
Touch the bottom of the submarine.
-Ellen Mason, AACS Music Teacher, 
https://buyjumpropes.net/resources/jump-rope-rhymes-songs-buyjumpropesnet/

****
CHICKEN IN THE CAR
Chicken in the car
And the car can't (or won't) go
That's how you spell
Chicago.
 
****

E, F

ENGINE ENGINE NUMBER NINE (Example #1)
Engine, engine number nine,
Going down Chicago line,
If the train goes off the track,
Do you want your money back?
Yes, no, maybe so!
-
https://www.mamalisa.com/?t=es&p=4143 [Jump Rhyme Rhyme]

****
ENGINE ENGINE NUMBER NINE (Example #2)
Engine, Engine number nine,
Coming down the Chicago line
Please tell me the correct time, the correct time is what?
-lloyd64, 30, 00; https://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=20909 Children's rhymes and playground songs [Singing game]
-snip-
Here's the comment that was written with this example:
"
As kid on the Chicago streets our favorite games were Buck, Buck and Engine, Engine Number Nine.

Engine, Engine Number Nine……

Everyone sits in a circle with hands folded into a fist. The leader (Engine) would say a rime as he tapped each fist….

Engine, Engine number nine,
Coming down the Chicago line
Please tell me the correct time, the correct time is what?

Some one would call out a number, the leader would count out the number by tapping the fists. If the leader landed on one of your fists, you had to take it out of the game by putting it behind your back. The leader would then start over again.

Engine, Engine number nine,
Coming down the Chicago line
Please tell me the correct time, the correct time is what?

This would continue until only one fist was left this became the new Engine."

****
ENGLAND, IRELAND, SCOTLAND, WALES (French Skipping; Elastics)
Nesta Robbins wrote: 
...Does anyone remember French skipping? Two people stood at either end, with feet apart, with a giant loop of elastic around their ankles, made by joining lots of rubber bands together.

Then someone in the middle performed different jumps, crossing the elastic over, or jumping in and around, or treading on the elastic. Then if you completed the jumps, you went up to the next level! The elastic was raised to knee height, then waist I think?!

[...]

Ooh I remember that. Ours went:

England (You'd jump so one foot was outside & one foot was inside the bands)

Ireland (Jump across, so the foot that was outside is now inside & vice versa)

Scotland (Jump back to where you started)

Wales (Jump across again)

Inside (self explanatory)

Outside ;)

Inside ;)

On :eek:
-L__Silverwolf, 17/03/10https://forums.digitalspy.com/discussion/1230193/skipping-rhymes-from-the-50s-and-60s/p2


****

G, H

GIRLS GO TO COLLEGE [Fragment of "My Mother And Your Mother Live Across The Street"]
4 little girls bouncing on a trampoline next door:

'Girls go to college to get more knowledge
Boys go to Jupiter to get more stupider
Mum goes to Mars, to get a bigger vase
Dad goes to Spain, to get a bigger brain'.
https://twitter.com/lissakevans/status/1101807713170919424?lang=en ; Lissa Evans,Mar 2, 2019


****
HAVE A CIGARETTE SIR
Have a cigarette, sir.
No, sir.
Why, sir?
Because I have a cold, sir.
How'd you get your cold, sir?
At the North Pole, sir.
What were you doing there, sir?
Catching polar bears, sir.
-
Wood (1996), https://mudcat.org/jumprope/jumprope_display_all.cfm


****
HERE WE GO ZUDIO (Example #1)
Here we go zoo-de-o, zoo-de-o, zoo-de-o,
Here we go zoo-de-o all night long.

(Repeat 1 time)

Step back Sally, Sally, Sally,
Step back Sally all night long.

I walked down through the alley
and what did I see,
I saw a big fat man from Tennessee.
I bet ya’ five dollars I can beat that man.
I bet ya’ five dollars I can beat that man.
To the front, to the back, to the see-saw-side.

(Repeat 1 time)

(Sung)
My mother called the doctor, the doctor said,
(Spoken) Oooh, ouch I got’ a pain in my side.
Oooh, ouch I got’ a pain in my head.
Oooh, ouch I got’ a pain in my stomach.

To the front, to the back, to the see-saw-side.
(Repeat 1 time)
To the see-saw-side.
(Repeat 1 time)
-https://www.schools.utah.gov/file/68115223-f618-4508-bb5e-7d1329606964
****

HERE WE GO ZOODIO (Example #2)
Here we go Zoodio, Zoodio, Zoodio
Here we go Zoodio,
All night long.

Step back, Sally, Sally, Sally
Step back, Sally
All night long.

To the front to the back to the s-s-side, to the s-s-side
To the front to the back to the s-s-side

I looked out my window and what did I see
I saw a big fat man from Tennessee 
I bet you five dollars I can beat that man
I bet you five dollars I can beat that man

To the front to the back to the s-s-side, to the s-s-side
To the front to the back to the s-s-side

Walkin' through the alley, alley, alley
Walkin' through the alley
All night long.
-https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoodio

****
HOLLYWOOD ROCK SWINGING (Example #1 of "Hollywood Swinging") 
Hollywood rock swinging 
Hollywood rock swinging

My name is Aniesha
I'm number one
My reputation is having fun
So if you see my just step aside
'Cause mighty Aniesha don't take no jive

Hollywood rock swinging
Hollywood rock swinging

My name is Katrina
I'm number two
My reputation is me and you
So if you see me just step on back
'Cause mighty Katrina don't take no slack

Hollywood rock swinging
Hollywood rock swinging

My name is Natasha
I'm number twelve
My reputation is ringing that bell
So if you see me just step aside
'Cause mighty Natasha don't take no jive
-Barbara Michels, Bettye White, editors, Apples On A Stick, The Folklore of Black Children; (Coward-McCann, Inc, 1983, p.14)
-snip-
No rhyme categories or performance descriptions is given for this example. However, I've collected foot stomping cheer examples and hand clap examples of "Hollywood Swinging". 
-snip-
Hollywood is a neighborhood in the city of Los Angeles, California.

****
HOLLYWOOD GOES SWINGIN (
Example #2 of "Hollywood Swinging") 
Hollywood
Hollywood
Hollywood goes swingin
Hollywood goes __ swingin
Swingin for Northside.
Swingin for the Eastside.
My name is Rita.
I'm Number 9
Going down Chicago line.
If you see me on the street
You better speak [I couldn't decipher the next words]
Hey hey, you think you cool.
Hey hey, cool enough to rule your school.
Hey hey, you think you bad.

Bad enough to ____ [The girls and boys self-censored what was supposed to be chanted. This was confirmed by a teenage volunteer who still wouldn't tell me what was supposed to be said]
-African American girls and boys; Northview Heights Buddy Program, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, August 19, 1999; collected by Azizi Powell

****
HORSEY HORSEY DON'T YOU STOP
horsey horsey dont you stop
just let your feet go clippity clop
let your feet got swish and your tail go round
gailey up to london town.
- GUEST, 29 Nov 09, https://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=20909 [Ball bouncing rhyme]

****
I, J

I AM A PRETTY LITTLE DUTCH GIRL (Example #1)
I am a pretty little Dutch girl,
As pretty as pretty can be,
And all the boys around the block
Go crazy over me.
My boyfriend's name is Billy,
He comes from good ole Philly,
With a cherry on his nose
And ten fat toes,
And that's the way my story goes.
My boyfriend gave me peaches,
My boyfriend gave me pears,
My boyfriend gave me fifty cents
And kissed me on the stairs.
I gave him back his peaches,
I gave him back his pears,
I gave him back his fifty cents
And kicked....him....down.....the.....stairs!
-
https://www.facebook.com/109490367471306/posts/pretty-little-dutch-girlthe-lyrics-of-the-song-vary-considerably-british-version/112343993852610/; version 2, retrieved August 11, 2022
-snip-
"Philly" is a nickname for Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA


****
I AM A PRETTY LITTLE DUTCH GIRL (Example #2)
I am a pretty little Dutch girl,
As pretty as pretty can be, be, be,
And all the boys on the baseball team
are chasing after me, me, me.
My father came from England,
My mother came from France, France, France.
My boyfriend came from the USA
to teach me how to dance, dance, dance.
My boyfriend gave me apples,
My boyfriend gave me pears, pears, pears.
My boyfriend gave me fifty cents
and kissed me up the stairs, stairs, stairs.
I gave him back his apples,
I gave him back his pears, pears, pears.
I gave him back his fifty cents
and kicked him down the stairs, stairs, stairs.
...with a pickle on his nose and 3 sore toes,
that's the way it goes, goes, goes.
https://www.facebook.com/109490367471306/posts/pretty-little-dutch-girlthe-lyrics-of-the-song-vary-considerably-british-version/112343993852610/; variation #5, Western Canada, 1960s, retrieved August 11, 2022

****
I AM A PRETTY LITTLE DUTCH GIRL (Example #3)
I am a pretty little Dutch girl
As pretty as pretty can be
and all the boys in my hometown
are crazy over me
My boyfriend's name is Chico
he came from Puerto Rico
with a rubber nose
and 28 toes
and this is how my story goes
One day as I was walking
I heard my Chico talking
to a pretty little girl
with strawberry curls
and this is what he said to her
I L-O-V-E love you
I K-I-S-S kiss you
I K-I-S-S kiss you
in the D-A-R-K dark dark dark
-
https://www.facebook.com/109490367471306/posts/pretty-little-dutch-girlthe-lyrics-of-the-song-vary-considerably-british-version/112343993852610/; variation #7,retrieved August 11, 2022

****
I AM A PRETTY LITTLE DUTCH GIRL (Example #4)
I am a pretty little Dutch girl
As pretty as pretty can be
And all the boys around the block
Are crazy over me.
My boyfriend's name is Harry.
He comes from Paris, France
With turned up toes and a pimple on his nose
And this is the way my story goes.
My boyfriend gave me apples,
My boyfriend gave me pears.
My boyfriend gave me fifty cents
And took me to the fair.
One day as I was walking
I heard my boyfriend talking
To a pretty little girl with a strawberry curl
and this is what he said to her:
I L-O-V-E, love you.
I K-I-S-S, kiss you.
I K-I-S-S, kiss you
On your F-A-C-E, face, face, face.
I gave him back his apples
I gave him back his pears
I gave him back his fifty cents
And threw him down the stairs.
I threw him over London.
I threw him over France.
I threw him over [substitute wherever here]
And he lost his underpants.
-
https://www.facebook.com/109490367471306/posts/pretty-little-dutch-girlthe-lyrics-of-the-song-vary-considerably-british-version/112343993852610/; variation #8, retrieved August 11, 2022

****
I AM A PRETTY LITTLE DUTCH GIRL (Example #5)
I am a pretty little Dutch girl, As pretty as can be, And all the boys around the block are crazy over me, me, me. My boyfriend's name is Chaim, He comes from yerushalayim, With a pickle up his nose and three black toes, And this is how my story goes. One day when I was walking, I saw my boyfriend talking To a pretty little girl with a strawberry curl And this is what he said to her: I L-O-V-E love you, I K-I-S-S kiss you. And he fell in the lake, And he swallowed a snake, And he came out with a bellyache.
https://www.facebook.com/109490367471306/posts/pretty-little-dutch-girlthe-lyrics-of-the-song-vary-considerably-british-version/112343993852610/; variation #9, retrieved August 11, 2022
-snip-
yerushalayim is a form of the name "Jerusalem". Jerusalem is the capital of Israel.

****
I AM A PRETTY LITTLE DUTCH GIRL (Example #6)
I am a pretty little Dutch girl, as pretty as pretty can be be be. And all the boys in the baseball team, go crazy over me me me. My boyfriends name is Steven, He comes from New Zealand. With five fat toes and a pimple on his nose, And this is how my story goes. One day when I was walking, I heard my boyfriend talking. To a pretty little girl with strawberry curls, and this is what he said to her: "I LOVE love you and I KISS kiss you" So jump in the lake and swallow a snake, and come out with a belly ache.
https://www.facebook.com/109490367471306/posts/pretty-little-dutch-girlthe-lyrics-of-the-song-vary-considerably-british-version/112343993852610/; variation #12, retrieved August 11, 2022
-snip-
This version of this rhyme is from Australia.

****
I AM A PRETTY LITTLE DUTCH GIRL (FRAGMENT; Example #7)
my boyfriend's name is patty
he lives in cincinatti
with forty-eight toes and a pickle on his nose
this is how my story goes:

one day i saw him walking when he was also talking
to a pretty little girl with strawberry curls and this is what he said to
her:

i L-O-V-E love you
i K-I-S-S kiss you
and if you ever move away i'll M-I-S-S miss you

i kicked him over london,
i kicked him over france
i kicked him over U-S-A and saw his purple underpants!
Miss Farrar, quoting maggie, email address, 
Apr 3, 1997, https://groups.google.com/g/rec.arts.books.childrens/c/KqUfjV4xxzc?pli=1

****
I DON'T WANT TO GO TO HOLLYWOOD (Example #1)
Shame Shame Shame.
I don’t want to go to Mexico
no more, more, more.
There’s a big fat policeman
at door, door, door.
He’ll grab you by the collar
and make you pay a dollar.
I don’t want to go to Mexico
no more, more, more.
-collected from African American girls and boys, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 2000s by Azizi Powell

****
I DON'T WANT TO GO TO HOLLYWOOD (Example #2)
Shame, shame, shame, I don't want to go to Hollywood no more, more, more. There's a fake Michael Jackson at the door, door, door. Grabbed me by the hips, kissed me on the lips, I don't want to go to Hollywood no more, more, more SHAME!
- unsigned comment added by 74.194.118.238 (talk) , 27 July 2014; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk%3AClapping_game/Examples

****
I DON'T WANT TO GO TO HOLLYWOOD (Example #3 of "I Don't Want To Go To Mexico")
Sham,sham,sham
I don't want to go hollywood
No more,more,more
there is a big fat Michel jackson
At my door,door,door
he'll grab me by the hips
Make me kiss his lips
I don't want to go hollywood
No more,more,more
-Anonymous on Sunday, November 19, 2000; Streetplay.com Discussion: Girl Games: Singing: Silly songs, theme songs, etc.: Archive through November 27, 2000 [This website is no longer active.]

****
I DON'T WANT TO GO TO MEXICO (Example #4)
Shame Shame Shame
I don't want to go to Mexico no more more more
There's a big fat policeman at the door, door, door.
He will pull you by the collar
Make you scream and holler
I don't want to go to Mexico no more.
-Geneas, Nov 4, 2018 "90s Hand games!; 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7zEcsIfe6lU&feature=emb_logo [This video is no longer available.]

****
I DON'T WANT TO GO TO MEXICO (Example #5)
Shame,shame,shame,
I dont wanna go to mexico,
no more more more,theres
a big fat policeman,
at the door door door,if you
grab him by the collar boy you better
hollar if you grab him by the pants,
boy you betta dance,i dont wanna go to mexico
no more more more shut the door

Im 13 and i still play that"

 http://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=63097 "Folklore: Do kids still do clapping rhymes?"
-Guest Brittany, June 4, 2011

****
I DON'T WANT TO GO TO MEXICO (Example #6)
"We had one that was like

I wanna go to mexico some more, more , more
There's a big fat police man at the door,door,door
If you open the door he'll pee on the floor
I don't wanna go to mexico no more, more, more

Mexico alternated with Hollywood and the fat police man sometimes were 2 cute boys who'd grab you by the hips and kiss you on the lips. Both honestly sounded really gross to us and more funny then anything."
-
Andrea Mercier, 2015 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=55TnrD5re5g [link no longer active]

****
I DON'T WANT TO GO TO MEXICO (Example #7)
Shame, shame, shame (Both people put their hand together and go back and forth)
I don't want to go to mexico no (middle, top, middle, right hand grab, left hand grab)
more, more, more. (slap thigh, snap, clap right hands)
There's a big fat policeman(clap back of right hands, clap, back and forth)
at the door, door, door (middle, top, middle, right hand grab)
grabbed me by the collar, (left hand grab, slap thigh, snap, clap right hands)
made me pay a dollar. (clap back of right hands, clap, back and forth)
I don't want to go to mexico no (middle, up, middle, right hand grab, left hand grab)
more, more, more. (slap thigh, snap clap right hands)
SHAME! (both people point at the other's face)

alternate lyrics:

Shame, shame, shame, I don't want to go to Hollywood no more, more, more. There's a fake Michael Jackson at the door, door, door. Grabbed me by the hips, kissed me on the lips, I don't want to go to Hollywood no more, more, more SHAME!
-Just Queenin, Jan 21, 2018, 
https://www.lipstickalley.com/threads/childhood-hand-games-you-played.1403360/page-2

****
I DON'T WANT TO GO TO TENNISEE (Example #8 of "I Don't Want To Go To Mexico") 
Sham,sham,sham
I don't want to go Tennisee
No more,more,more
there is a big fat Elves
at my door,door,door
He'll grab me by the wrist
Make me do the twist
I don't want to go Tennisee
No more,more,more
-Anonymous on Sunday, November 19, 2000; Streetplay.com Discussion: Girl Games: Singing: Silly songs, theme songs, etc.: Archive through November 27, 2000 [This website is no longer active.]
-snip-
"Tennisee" is a misspelling of "Tennessee". "Elves" is probably a misspelling of "Elvis".

****

IN THE LAND OF FRANCE (Read examples for "There's A Place In France" below.)

****
IN THE LAND OF OZ
In the land of Oz
Where the ladies where no bras
But the men don’t care
'cuz they wear no underwear
-Trigonal_Planar Guest, Feb 03, https://boards.straightdope.com/t/whats-the-real-name-of-that-theres-a-place-in-france-song/155487/13
-snip-
"Oz" is a colloquial name for the nation (and continent) of Australia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Name_of_Australia

This example is a version of "There's A Place In France". A few examples of that rhyme are found below.

****
INSIDE OUTSIDE [elastics jumping] Example #1
England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales
Inside
Outside
Puppy dogs tails
-geekgroupie42, 2021 [comment], https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ag9Ou0YpD0o "Elastics... The Next Level - Suzy & Friends, published by TreehutTV, Oct. 13, 2017

****
INSIDE OUTSIDE [elastics jumping] Example #2
My friends and I say

England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Inside, outside, inside, on
-Caitlyn Allira, 2019 [comment] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7lEmfq_NDlU "LaunchPad Elastics: Game 1", published by ausgymnastics, June 29, 2017
-snip-
I reformatted this example to separate the contributor's comment from the words that are actually chanted.  

****
INSIDE OUTSIDE [elastics jumping] Example #3
I remember we use to say

 “England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Inside, Outside, Monkey’s Tails”
-Nicole Trifunovic, 2021 [comment] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7lEmfq_NDlU "LaunchPad Elastics: Game 1", published by ausgymnastics, June 29, 2017
-snip-
I reformatted this example to separate the contributor's comment from the words that are actually chanted.  

****
INSIDE OUTSIDE [elastics jumping] Example #4
We say

England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, 
inside, outside, scales
-Abbi O'Conner, 2019 [comment] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7lEmfq_NDlU "LaunchPad Elastics: Game 1", published by ausgymnastics, June 29, 2017
-snip-
I reformatted this example to separate the contributor's comment from the words that are actually chanted.  

****
INSIDE OUTSIDE [elastics jumping] Example #5
In Northern Ireland we tend to say

England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Inside, Outside, on the British Rails 
-Doyle The Chocolate Lab [comment] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7lEmfq_NDlU "LaunchPad Elastics: Game 1", published by ausgymnastics, June 29, 2017
-snip-
I reformatted this example to separate the contributor's comment from the words that are actually chanted.  

That discussion thread also has examples that end with "jump on the rails", "on the British scales" "on the Briitsh Isles", "twist and out" and other endings. 

****
I SEE  
I see Germany, I see France
I see somebody's underpants
-Bev and Jerry, 21 May 2005, https://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=81350 I'm Rubber . You're Glue: Children's Rhymes
-snip-
Bev and Jerry wrote "We were both brought up in Cleveland, Ohio (but we got over it). We remember saying and hearing this in elementary school in the late 1940s and early 1950s."
-snip-
I remember chanting (with no accompanying movements) "I see London / I see France / I see [insert a name] underpants" in the 1950s in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

****
I SEE LONDON, I SEE FRANCE (Example #1)
I see London, I see France
I see {name} underpants. (* Name a girl *)
Not too big. Not too small.
Just the size for cannonballs.
-
Hastings (1990), https://mudcat.org/jumprope/jumprope_display_all.cfm

****

I SEE LONDON, I SEE FRANCE (Example #2)
I see London,
I see France,
I see someone's underpants.
Are they blue?
Are they pink?
I don't know but they sure do stink!
-Jessica,  February 07, 2007,  http://hunsford.blogspot.com/2007/02/childhood-sayings.html

**** 
I SEE LONDON, I SEE FRANCE (Example #3)
I see London, I see France,
I see (xxx)s underpants,
Not too big, not too small,
Just the size of Montreal (or just the size of cannonball, Berlin Wall, etc.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skipping-rope_rhyme

****
K, L

KAISER BILL
Kaiser Bill         (* William II of Germany, circa 1915 *)
Went up the hill
To take a shot at France.
Kaiser Bill
Came down the hill
With bullets in his pants.
-
Milnes (1996); https://mudcat.org/jumprope/jumprope_display_all.cfm

****

M, N

MEXICO TEXICO [title]
From Texaco, Texaco
Over the hills and away we go
Over the hills to Mexico
Where they do the splits, splits, splits,
And the high kicks, kicks, kicks.
We'll turn around, round, round,
And touch the ground, ground, ground.
Quick, get out of town, town, town.
Get back in, in, in,
Find a friend, friend, friend,
How many tacos can you make?
1 - 2 - 3 ..
-EmilyGrace, https://www.mamalisa.com/?t=es&p=4098
-snip-
Here's a note on that website about this rhyme: "
This is a jump rope game. I only ever played it on the playground in Missouri. When I moved to Georgia, the girls didn't know it. We called it 'Mexico Texaco'." -Emily Grace

The rhyme "Texico Mexico" is given in the "T" section below.

**
M I CROOKED LETTER
M-I crooked letter
Crooked letter I
Crooked Letter
Crooked letter I 
Humpback humpback I 
Mississippi!”
https://www.care.com/c/11-catchy-jump-rope-rhymes/

****
MISS SUSIE HAD A STEAMBOAT (Example #1)
Miss Susie had a steamboat, the steamboat had a bell,
Miss Susie went to heaven, The steamboat went to...
Hello operator, please give me number nine,
And if you disconnect me, I'll chop of your...
Behind the fridgerator, there was a piece of glass,
Miss Susie sat on it, and broke her little...
Ask me no more questions, tell me no more lies,
The boys are in the bathroom, zipping up their...
Flies are in the meadow, bees are in the park,
Miss Susie and her boyfriend, are kissing in the...
D-A-R-K, D-A-R-K, dark, dark,
Dark is like a movie, A movie's like a show,
A show is like a TV set, and that is all...
I know I know my ma, I know I know my pa,
I know I know my sister, with the 80 meter bra!
My mom was born in England, My dad was born in France,
I was born in diapers, I couldn't fit in pants.
My mom is Godzilla, My dad is King Kong,
My brother is the stupid one, who made up this dumb song!
http://www.inthe80s.com/rhymes.shtml Children's Rhymes From the Eighties

****
MISS SUE FROM ALABAMA (Example #1)
Miss Sue! *clap clap*
Miss Sue! *clap clap*
Miss Sue from Alabama
Her real names Suzyanna
Sittin in a rockin chair
Eatin Betty Crocker bread
Watchin the clock go
Tick tock tick tock Banana rock!
Tick tock tick tock Banana rock!
A-b-c-d-e-f-g Wash them spots right offa me!
Moocha Moocha Moocha Freeze!

*literally freeze on the last clap,
try to stay still longer than your friend
-darlenevil; cocojams.com, 2/1/2005 
-snip-
Cocojams was the name of my cultural website. Some content from that website is found on my pancocojams blog and/or on my cocojams2 blog.

**** 
MISS SUE FROM ALABAMA (Example #2)
Miss Sue, Miss Sue, Miss Sue from Alabama, Alaska, Nebraska
Sitting in a rocker, eating Betty Crocker,
Watching the clock go
Tick, tock, tick, tock, banana rock(sometimes we said "around the clock" instead of "banana rock")
Tick, tock, tick, tock, banana rock
A, B, C, D, E, F, G, wash those  boy germs off of me
Mooshka, mooshka, mooshka 
FREEZE!
-
 Bijlee » 2012-11-20, 5:00, Re: Childhood Rhymes, https://forum.unilang.org/viewtopic.php?t=39100

****
MISS SUE FROM ALABAMA (Example #3)
ms sue clap clap clap ms sue from Alabama Alaska Nebraska she was sitting in her rocking chair chewing on her under ware watching the time go tick toc tick toc banana rock tic toc tick toc banana rock abcdefg wash these kittens off of my mushka mushka mushka freeze icky icky donkey daddy had a donkey donkey died daddy cried icky icky donkey
-Jennifer Lofgren, 2018; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lNkxEU3OFbU[comment]
-snip-
This comment started with the words "Me and my friends go" 

****
MISS SUSIE HAD A STEAMBOAT
Miss Susie had a steamboat,
The steamboat had a bell.
Miss Susie went to heaven,
The steamboat went to $&#/$&

Hello operator,
Please give me number nine.
And if you disconnect me
I’ll chop of your /&$#%$

Behind the frigerator
There was a piece of glass.
Miss Mary sat upon it.
It went right up her "%"$(=

Ask me no more questions,
Please tell me no more lies.
The boys are in the bathroom,
Zipping down their "$%$&/&

Flies are in the city,
The bees are in the park.
Boys and girls are kissing
In the D-A-R-K
D-A-R-K D-A-R-K dark dark dark

Dark is like a movie,
A movie’s like a show.
A show is like a TV screen,
And that is all I know

I know I know my mother,
I know I know my pa.
I know I know my sister
With the forty acre bra.

Brother’s like a sister,
A sister’s like an aunt.
An aunt is like a relative
Who likes to rave and rant.

I wish I had a nickel
I wish I had a dime
I wish I had a boyfriend
Who kissed me all the time!

My Ma gave me a nickel
My Pa gave me a dime.
My Sister gave me a boyfriend,
Who'd kiss me all the time

My Ma took back the nickel,
My Pa took back the dime.
My Sister took back her boyfriend,
and gave me Frankenstein!

He made me wash the dishes,
He made me wash the floors,
He made me wash his underwear,
So I kicked him out the door

I kicked him over London,
I kicked him over France.
I kicked him to Hawaii,
where he learned to Hula dance!

My mothers like Godzilla,
My fathers like King Kong.
My sister is the stupid one
That taught me this dumb song.

Hello operator,
Please give me number ten.
And if you disconnect me,
I’ll sing this song again!
https://www.nurseryrhymes.org/miss-susie-had-a-steamboat-hello-operator.html

**** 
MISS SUE FROM PARRAMATTA 
Miss Sue
Miss Sue
Miss Sue from Parramata

Hey you
Scooby-Doo
Your mother's got the measles
Your fathers got the flu
Magic measles magic flu
Take a abcdefg
Take a hijklmnop
Take a smooth shot
Take a smooth shot
And freeze.
-buttercup7956, Mar 19, 2011
-snip-
Parramata is a suburb of Sydney,Australia.

****
MY MOTHER GAVE ME A NICKEL 
My mother gave me a nickel
My father gave me a dime
My sister gave me a boyfriend
His name is Frankenstein/to kiss him all the time.
He made me wash the dishes
He made me wash the floor
He made me wash his underwear
So I kicked him out the door.
I kicked him to Los Angeles
I kicked him to Japan
I also kicked him everywhere
without his underwear.
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/9780470773567.app2 Hanley School Jump Rope Rhymes; Appendix B, Jump Rope Rhymes [jump Rope Rhymes in Downtown Los Angeles]

****
MY SOUP, MY SOUP
My soup, my soup
My soup from California
Sitting in a rocket
Eating chocolate waiting for the Time to go
Tic tic cicawawa tic tic cicawawa
A b c d e f g
Gummy bears are chasing me

One is red
One is blue
One is peeing on my shoe
I'm running running for my life
Cause the red one has a knife
CACHING"
- The Colour English, 2016, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d-svfUMX3BM [comment]
-snip-
"My Soup From California" is a folk processed form of "Miss Sue From Alabama".

****
MY YOUNG MAN
My young man has gone to France,
To teach the ladies how to dance.
When he comes back,
He'll marry me,
And we'll dance the polka 1 2 3
1 2 3, 1 2 3,
We'll dance the polka 1 2 3.
https://buyjumpropes.net/resources/jump-rope-rhymes-songs-buyjumpropesnet/

****
O, P

OPEN THE BARNYARD (Example #1)
Open the barnyard,
kick out the hay,
We're the girls from the USA.
Turn up the radio,
who do you hear?
Elvis Presley singing his cheer.
We gotta F-I-G-H-T,
We gotta F-I-G-H-T,
We gotta F-I-G-H-T, (throw out punches into the air as the word is being spelled out each time) We gotta fight, fight, fight, on a Saturday night".
-Alex, cocojams.com cheerleader cheers (Website no longer active), 9/19/2007

****
OPEN UP THE BARNDOOR (Example #2)
Open up the barndoor
Kick out the hay
We’re the girls from the USA
Turn on the radio
Who do you hear
Justin Beiber doin a cheer
We gotta F
an I
Ah GHT
We gotta F
an I
Ah GHT
We gotta F
an I
Ah GHT
We gotta fight fight fight for victory!
-Supermaxkato, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SGGfS-ZmzSk, March 23, 2013

****

Q, R

****
S, T

SHAME SHAME SHAME (Read examples above for "I Don't Want To Go To Mexico")

****
SO SO SUCK YOUR TOE
So so suck your toe
All the way to Mexico.
While you're there
Cut your hair
And don't forget your underwear.
-Jessica, February 07, 2007 http://hunsford.blogspot.com/2007/02/childhood-sayings.html
-snip-
This example was prefaced by this comment: "Someone just mentioned one I haven't heard in twenty-five" years:

****
TELL IT TELL IT
Tell, tell, go to jail
Hang ya draws on a rusty nail
Hang 'em high, hang 'em low
all the way to Mexico
-
mighty hornet, Jul 26, 2006, https://www.hbcusports.com/forums/threads/childhood-expressions.48612/

****

TEXACO MEXICO
Texaco Mexico [Turners turn rope]
Went over the hill [Jumper jumps into the moving rope]
Where far away [Jumper jumps]
And they do some splits, splits, splits [Jumper executes splits]
And they turn around round round [Jumper turns around]
And they touch the ground, ground, [Jumper touches the ground]
And they do some kicks, kicks, kicks [Jumper does kicks]
And they pay their taxes, taxes, taxes [Jumper slaps hand of turner]
And they get outa town, town, town [Jumper moves out of the rope]
And they jump back in, in, in [Jumper jumps back into the rope]
And that’s the end, end, end [Jumper jumps out of the rope]
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/9780470773567.app2 Hanley School Jump Rope Rhymes; Appendix B, Jump Rope Rhymes [jump Rope Rhymes in Downtown Los Angeles]

****
THE CAT SAT ON THE TRAM LINES
The Cat sat on the tram Lines
the driver rang his Bell,
The Tram went on to Heeley
but the Cat went tro Hell.
-
shanes teeth, April 8, 2019, https://www.sheffieldforum.co.uk/topic/131030-remember-any-old-silly-verses-etc-you-were-told-as-a-child/page/88/#comments
-snip-
According to Wikipedia, Heeley is a former cluster of villages which all now form a suburb of the city of Sheffield, England. 

****
THE JACKSON FIVE
The Jackson Five (* musical group, circa 1963 *)
Went to France
To teach the children
How to dance.
A heel and a toe (* Jumper lands on heel and toe *)
And round you go. (* Jumper turns full around *)
A heel and a toe (* Jumper lands on heel and toe *)
And around I go. (* Jumper turns full around *)
Salute to the captain. (* Jumper salutes *)
Bow to the king. (* Jumper bows *)
Turn your back (* Jumper turns other direction *)
On the ugly old queen.
-
Knapp (1976); https://mudcat.org/jumprope/jumprope_display_all.cfm

****
THERE'S A PLACE CALLED MARS
There's a place called Mars
where the ladies smoke cigars
and they often state
it's enough to kill a snake.
If the snake is dead
they put roses on its head.
If the roses die
they put diamonds in its eyes.
If the diamonds break
they sing 1968.
-c
ulhane (1995), https://mudcat.org/jumprope/jumprope_display_all.cfm

****
THERE'S A PLACE IN FRANCE (Example #1)
There’s a place in France,
Where the naked ladies dance.
There’s a hole in the wall,
Where the men watch it all.
But the men don't care,
'Cuz they chew their underwear,
And the underwear they chew
Costs a dollar ninety two.
https://everything2.com/title/There+is+a+place+in+France


****
THERE'S A PLACE IN FRANCE (Example #2)
There’s a place in France
Where the naked ladies dance
But the men don’t care
Cause they don’t wear underwear

Circa 1975, central Minnesota.
-chique, Feb. 2003, https://boards.straightdope.com/t/whats-the-real-name-of-that-theres-a-place-in-france-song/155487/9

****
THERE'S A PLACE IN FRANCE (Example #3)
There’s a place in France
Where the alligators dance
The one couldn’t dance
So they kicked him in the pants
The pants next door
Cost a dollar forty four
Plus tax.
-racer72, Feb 2003 https://boards.straightdope.com/t/whats-the-real-name-of-that-theres-a-place-in-france-song/155487/9

****
U, V

UP AND DOWN JAMAICA TOWN
Up and down Jamaica Town
A house made out of glass.
I stepped into a lady's house
And there she made me laugh.
-
Abrahams (1969), https://mudcat.org/jumprope/jumprope_display_all.cfm

****
W, X

WEE SAM
wee sam a pice in jam
went to london in a pram
the pram broke
what a joke
wee sam a pice in jam
- GUEST, 29 Nov 09, https://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=20909 [Ball bouncing rhyme]

****
Y, Z

****
Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome.