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Weet weet - Wikipedia
Weet weet (also called wit-wit or throwing the play stick) is an Australian Aboriginal children's throwing game popular in some parts of Australia.
en.wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Weet weets - The Australian Museum
Weet weets were designed to be thrown over long distances, and when thrown, would make hopping movements across the ground.
australian.museum
australian.museum
[PDF] weet weet - Australian Sports Commission
The throwing of the play-stick, commonly called the weet weet ('wit-wit') was a popular activity among. Aboriginal people in some parts of Australia, and.
www.sportaus.gov.au
www.sportaus.gov.au
weet-weet
▪ I. weet-weet, int. and n.1 [Echoic.] 1. int. (ˈwiːtˈwiːt). An imitation of the cry of certain birds, esp. the sandpiper and chaffinch. Also n. as the name for this cry.1808–13 A. Wilson Amer. Ornith. (1831) III. 170, I could still hear their low note of weet weet, as they approached near to the ve...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
WEET-WEET Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of WEET-WEET is the common European sandpiper.
www.merriam-webster.com
www.merriam-webster.com
Weet weet | Astrohanasia Wiki - Fandom
Weet weet is a popular wooden children's toy. Weet weets are made from a single piece of wood, shaped to resemble a tadpole. They have a bulbous head which ...
astrohanasia.fandom.com
astrohanasia.fandom.com
Weet weet
Samuel Clemens, Mark Twain and weet-weet
The famous writer Mark Twain as an example of wit and intelligence of the Australian aborigines wrote a chapter in his book Following the Equator about the weet-weet (or kangaroo-rat) But the mentioned chapter is not a simple description of an exotic toy, it is
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Yulunga: weet weet - Scootle
The throwing of the play-stick, commonly called the weet weet ('wit-wit') was a popular activity among Aboriginal people in some parts of Australia, and various ...
www.scootle.edu.au
www.scootle.edu.au
weet-weet - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
weet-weet (plural weet-weets). (obsolete, UK, dialect) The common European sandpiper. (obsolete, UK, dialect) The chaffinch.
en.wiktionary.org
en.wiktionary.org
[PDF] An Unusual South Eastern Australian Aboriginal 'Weet ... - Finch & Co
'WEET WEET' IS AN ABORIGINAL NAME FROM THE VICTORIA, NEW SOUTH WALES AREA OF AUSTRALIA FOR A THROWING. TOY OR IMPLEMENT THAT CONSISTS OF A CIGAR SHAPED CLUB ...
www.finch-and-co.co.uk
www.finch-and-co.co.uk
Weet weet Facts for Kids - Kids encyclopedia facts
Weet weet (also called wit-wit or throwing the play stick) is an exciting throwing game from Australia. It was created by Aboriginal children.
kids.kiddle.co
kids.kiddle.co
Weet-Bix
Weet-Bix is a whole-grain wheat breakfast cereal created and manufactured in Australia and New Zealand by the Sanitarium Health Food Company, and in South Africa by Bokomo. History Weet-Bix was developed by Bennison Osborne in Sydney, Australia in the mid-1920s. Osborne set out to make a product mor...
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
weet
▪ I. weet, v.1 arch. (wiːt) Also 6 wete, 6–7 weete. [repr. ME. wēte(n, var. ff. wite(n inf. and pl. pres. ind. and subj., and wite imperative and sing. pres. subj., of wit v. (for the other parts of the verb see wot v., wist v.). From the middle of the 16th c., if not earlier, the form weet seems to...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
Weet-Bix cards
Weet-Bix cards are a series of collectors' cards issued in cereal boxes by the Sanitarium Health and Wellbeing Company in Australia and New Zealand. Sanitarium started the Weet-Bix cards in 1942 in Australia to market their Weet-Bix cereal. The company later expanded the cards to its Granose, Bixies...
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Three-banded Plover - eBird
A small, dark plover of freshwater and brackish wetlands with one white and two black breast-bands and a broad white forehead. The juvenile has less distinct breast bands. It moves busily along wetland edges, foraging for insects by pecking in the mud and on the water's surface. Calls a rapid grated staccato "kreet" and high-pitched "weet-weet" as it flies off when alarmed. Similar ...
ebird.org