in the 80’s they were future tellers. But my son (3rd grade) just brought one home and called it a cootie catcher. So ya know….whatever works
“them thingies”
Fortune teller
Colour changers
Chatterbox
Chatterboxes
Pick n choose
Fortune Teller.
I don’t think they had a name when I was at school.
Foldy paper question thingys
Fortune teller
It never had a name. It just appeared out of nowhere
(Actually out of what the kids one year above you at school were doing last year. Now make an “o” with forefinger and thumb and hold it below waist level. Now make someone look at it… That was nameless too)
I’m torn, I don’t know if I want to call it a fortune teller or a cootie catcher. Canadian background if it makes a difference.
A good time –
Chocky
I once made a missfortune teller for a callcentre office job I had for a while way back. Thing lasted months as it made the rounds.
So many people got told “Its aids!” over the space of those 4 months.
They had a name?
Fortune teller
Cootie catcher in the US
Thingwaymajigs, identified only by the hand actions.
I remember seeing them in a book on origami when I was a kid, and they called them “Spanish salt cellars” which I always remember thinking was pretty bloody weird.
Things
As we were walking back to class after lunch, a guy in my primary class offered our teacher a go on his. She opened the final word and read aloud “big fanny flaps”
Used to make them all the time but we never actually had a name for them? Now it seems strange that we didn’t, just the paper thingy
38 comments
Colours
Flicker dicker
Finger fortune teller / loball insult generator for bored kids
Pick & Choose
I don’t recall them ever having a name, missus can’t remember either 😂
“That folded paper thing” is as close as I remember.
Political decisions.
Fortune Teller
That origami thing where you choose things, count and open up the flappy thing then read the message. Usually an insult.
I could not remember, so looked it up! Sharing what I found https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paper_fortune_teller
My Canadian kids called them Cootie Catchers
in the 80’s they were future tellers. But my son (3rd grade) just brought one home and called it a cootie catcher. So ya know….whatever works
“them thingies”
Fortune teller
Colour changers
Chatterbox
Chatterboxes
Pick n choose
Fortune Teller.
I don’t think they had a name when I was at school.
Foldy paper question thingys
Fortune teller
It never had a name. It just appeared out of nowhere
(Actually out of what the kids one year above you at school were doing last year. Now make an “o” with forefinger and thumb and hold it below waist level. Now make someone look at it… That was nameless too)
I’m torn, I don’t know if I want to call it a fortune teller or a cootie catcher. Canadian background if it makes a difference.
A good time –
Chocky
I once made a missfortune teller for a callcentre office job I had for a while way back. Thing lasted months as it made the rounds.
So many people got told “Its aids!” over the space of those 4 months.
They had a name?
Fortune teller
Cootie catcher in the US
Thingwaymajigs, identified only by the hand actions.
I remember seeing them in a book on origami when I was a kid, and they called them “Spanish salt cellars” which I always remember thinking was pretty bloody weird.
Things
As we were walking back to class after lunch, a guy in my primary class offered our teacher a go on his. She opened the final word and read aloud “big fanny flaps”
Used to make them all the time but we never actually had a name for them? Now it seems strange that we didn’t, just the paper thingy
“Pick-a-number, pick-a-colour, pick-a-number, pick-a-colour”
What is the origin of this game?
They were fortune tellers at my school.
Cootie Catcher
Trouble!
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