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  2. List of string figures - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_string_figures

    "Opening A", seen from below "Two Diamonds" Heraklas' "Plinthios Brokhos" made in a doubled cord.Resembles "A Hole in the Tree" with different crossings. "Cradle", the first (and opening) position of Cat's cradle "Soldier's Bed" from Cat's cradle "Candles" from Cat's cradle "Diamonds" from Cat's cradle "Cat's Eye" from Cat's cradle "Fish in a Dish" from Cat's cradle "Grandfather Clock" from ...

  3. String figure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/String_figure

    String figures have also been used for divination, such as to predict the sex of an unborn child. [1] A popular string game is cat's cradle, but many string figures are known in many places under different names, [2] and string figures are well distributed throughout the world. [3] [4]

  4. Diabolo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diabolo

    The diabolo goes under a stick and the stick touches the string, making the diabolo swing around the stick and land back on the string. Cats cradle/spiderweb: This trick starts with a trapeze. The stick not in the trapeze is inserted between the strings on either side of the stick in the trapeze.

  5. Chinese jump rope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_jump_rope

    Chinese jump rope combines the skills of hopscotch with some of the patterns from the hand-and-string game cat's cradle. The game began in 7th-century China. In the 1960s, children in the Western hemisphere adapted the game. German-speaking children call Chinese jump rope gummitwist and British children call it elastics. The game is typically ...

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  7. Alfred Cort Haddon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Cort_Haddon

    He was the first to recognise the ethnological importance of string figures and tricks, known in England as "cats' cradles," but found all over the world as a pastime among native peoples. He and Rivers invented a nomenclature and method of describing the process of making the different figures, and one of his daughters, Kathleen Rishbeth ...

  8. 32 tricks to teach your cat - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/32-tricks-teach-cat...

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  9. Caroline Furness Jayne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caroline_Furness_Jayne

    Caroline Augusta Jayne (née Furness; July 3, 1873 – June 23, 1909) was an American ethnologist who published the first book on string figures in 1906 titled String Figures: A Study of Cat's Cradle in Many Lands.