Talk:The Twelve Days of Christmas (carol): Difference between revisions

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imported>Larry Sanger
(New page: I would like to point out that the pipers outrank the lords, ladies, dancers, maids, and poultry, as is apt. But I have no idea why the drummers outrank the pipers. And of course the com...)
 
imported>Joe Quick
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I would like to point out that the pipers outrank the lords, ladies, dancers, maids, and poultry, as is apt.  But I have no idea why the drummers outrank the pipers.  And of course the common version omits: Thirteen fiddlers a-fiddling.
I would like to point out that the pipers outrank the lords, ladies, dancers, maids, and poultry, as is apt.  But I have no idea why the drummers outrank the pipers.  And of course the common version omits: Thirteen fiddlers a-fiddling.


So what does "perdrix" mean? --[[User:Larry Sanger|Larry Sanger]] 21:51, 11 December 2007 (CST)
So what does "perdrix" mean? --[[User:Larry Sanger|Larry Sanger]] 21:51, 11 December 2007 (CST)
:Hee, hee,  hee.  er...every culture has drummers, but not every culture has pipers?  Best I could do off the top of my head!
:"Perdrix", is one way to translate "partridge".  In poetry, "and a paar-tri-idge, eu-ner-pair-dree" (I can't do that phonetic thing---obviously :)
:Should this be, like, a subpage in the Christmas cluster?
:[[User:Aleta Curry|Aleta Curry]] 22:26, 11 December 2007 (CST)

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 Definition English Christmas carol which enumerates a series of increasingly grandiose gifts given on each of the twelve days of Christmas, ultimately leaving the singer with 364 gifts from her 'true love.' [d] [e]
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I would like to point out that the pipers outrank the lords, ladies, dancers, maids, and poultry, as is apt. But I have no idea why the drummers outrank the pipers. And of course the common version omits: Thirteen fiddlers a-fiddling.

So what does "perdrix" mean? --Larry Sanger 21:51, 11 December 2007 (CST)

Hee, hee, hee. er...every culture has drummers, but not every culture has pipers? Best I could do off the top of my head!
"Perdrix", is one way to translate "partridge". In poetry, "and a paar-tri-idge, eu-ner-pair-dree" (I can't do that phonetic thing---obviously :)
Should this be, like, a subpage in the Christmas cluster?
Aleta Curry 22:26, 11 December 2007 (CST)