The itsy spider


Itsy Bitsy Spider Lyrics

Songs

Little boys and girls will love moving their hands to this traditional children's song.

Itsy Bitsy Spider, or alternatively Incy Wincy Spider, has long been a favorite among children. The origin of the song is unknown, but it was first published in 1920 as a song for adults. It wasn’t until 1947-1948 when Itsy Bitsy Spider made it’s first appearance as a nursery rhyme. It’s remained bascially unchanged since then, and children and adults of all ages enjoyed this finger-play rhyme.

Itsy Bitsy Spider Lyrics

The itsy bitsy spider
Climbed up the waterspout
Down came the rain
And washed the spider out
Out came the sun
And dried up all the rain
And the itsy bitsy spider
Climbed up the spout again

The itsy bitsy spider
Climbed up the kitchen wall
Swoosh! went the fan
And made the spider fall
Off went the fan
No longer did it blow
So the itsy bitsy spider
Back up the wall did go

The itsy bitsy spider
Climbed up the yellow pail
In came a mouse
And flicked her with his tail
Down fell the spider
The mouse ran out the door
Then the itsy bitsy spider
Climbed up the pail once more

The itsy bitsy spider
Climbed up the rocking chair
Up jumped a cat
And knocked her in the air
Down plopped the cat
And when he was asleep
The itsy bitsy spider
Back up the chair did creep

The itsy bitsy spider
Climbed up the maple tree
She slipped on some dew
And landed next to me
Out came the sun
And when the tree was dry
The itsy bitsy spider
Gave it one more try

The itsy bitsy spider
Climbed up without a stop
She spun a silky web
Right at the very top
She wove and she spun
And when her web was done
The itsy bitsy spider
Rested in the sun

Iza Trapani•September 1, 2019

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The Itsy Bitsy Spider (TV Series 1994–1995)

Episode guide
  • TV Series
  • 1994–19951994–1995
  • TV-Y7TV-Y7
  • 13m

IMDb RATING

7.1/10

53

YOUR RATING

Animation

IMDb RATING

7.1/10

53

YOUR RATING

  • Creators
    • Willard Carroll
    • Matthew O'Callaghan
  • Stars
    • Matt Frewer
    • Frank Welker
    • Charlotte Rae
  • Creators
    • Willard Carroll
    • Matthew O'Callaghan
  • Stars
    • Matt Frewer
    • Frank Welker
    • Charlotte Rae
  • See production, box office & company info
  • See more at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination

    Episodes26

    Browse episodes

    2 seasons

    21See all

    2 years

    19951994See all

    Photos

    Top cast

    Matt Frewer

    • The Exterminator
    26 episodes26 eps • 1994–1995

    Frank Welker

    26 episodes26 eps • 1994–1995

    Charlotte Rae

    • Adrienne
    26 episodes26 eps • 1994–1995

    Francesca Marie Smith

    • Leslie
    26 episodes26 eps • 1994–1995

    Jonathan Taylor Thomas

    • George
    3 episodes3 eps • 1994–1995

    Mike Mitchell

    2 episodes2 eps • 1994

    Harland Williams

    1 episode1 ep • 1994

    Liz Sheridan

    1 episode1 ep • 1994

    Ashley Peldon

    1 episode1 ep • 1994

    Kent Osborne

    1 episode1 ep • 1994

    Conrad Vernon

    1 episode1 ep • 1994

    Howard Morton

    1 episode1 ep • 1994

    Mike Mitchell

    1 episode1 ep • 1994

    Tom Robbins

    1 episode1 ep • 1994

    Monty Hoffman

    1 episode1 ep • 1994

    Edie McClurg

    1 episode1 ep • 1995

    Chris Young

    1 episode1 ep • 1995

    Terrence 'T. C.' Carson

    1 episode1 ep • 1995
    • Creators
      • Willard Carroll
      • Matthew O'Callaghan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    More like this

    The Itsy Bitsy Spider

    A Miss Mallard Mystery

    Storyline

    Did you know

    • Connections

      Follows The Itsy Bitsy Spider (1992)

    User reviews

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    Details

    • Release date
      • November 7, 1994 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • China
      • Taiwan
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Itsy Bitsy - Einer spinnt immer
    • Production companies
      • Hyperion Animation
      • Hyperion Pictures
      • Shanghai Morning Sun Animation Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Technical specs

    • Runtime

      13 minutes

    • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1. 33 : 1

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    Spider Solitaire (Two Suits) - Playing Cards Online

    Online Spider Solitaire 2 Suits is the same card puzzle as its one-suited version. However, this version is a less complex configuration, but also still requires concentration, building logical conclusions to achieve a winning layout. At first glance, it is complex and time-consuming and seems too complicated, but when you master it, you will realize that it is very simple. You can't win every time, but you're more likely to win if you think carefully about your strategy.

    At the very top of the screen in front of the player there are ten (10) columns (stacks, columns), six of which have 4 cards face down and one face down, and the remaining four have five (5 ) face down and one at a time facing the user. At the very bottom, under the columns, there is a distributing deck, by clicking on which, one card is distributed to each column facing the user.

    Objective

    The object of the game is to arrange the available cards in the stacks and in the hand deck into eight (8) sequences of the same suit in descending order of denomination - from king (highest) to ace (lowest).

    How to play?

    Any card can always be placed on top of another card that is higher in rank. You can, for example, put 7 of clubs on 8 of clubs or 8 of hearts, diamonds or spades. You can drag multiple cards together as long as they are a set of the same suit. For example, if you have an 8, 7, 6 of hearts, then you can click on the 8 and move them all together to a 9 of any suit. However, if you have 8 hearts, 7 vines, and 6 hearts, you cannot click on the 8 and move them.

    If there is at least one empty column, then distribution will not occur from the distribution deck when pressed.

    Strategy

    It is necessary to adhere to the following recommendations for developing a strategy:

    • Although according to the rules it is allowed to build sets from any suit, but with decreasing denomination, it is always desirable for a player, if possible, to form sets of the same suit.
    • Higher value cards should be preferred when creating mixed suit strings, as they will be available for longer to create long sequences compared to lower value cards, which will soon be completed with an ace that cannot be played.
    • At the beginning of the game it is very useful to free at least one column stack, if possible. Most likely, you will need empty columns to move the kings to them, since he is the oldest in the ordered sequence. But here you can move something else, if necessary. However, keep in mind that once you move a king to an empty pile, you will not be able to empty that column again until you complete the sequence from king to ace or move that king to another empty column. Therefore, move kings to empty columns only when it will help you access the cards below them.
    • Whenever possible, keep a certain number of cards of the same suit in one pile, and use other columns for mixed suits. Although, of course, such a sequence will be interrupted with a new distribution from the dispensers. decks (this is inevitable). But when this happens, first clear the pile of the same-suited cards from the excess. By following this recommendation, you will be able to add fully ordered chains from king to ace faster.
    • One-suited chains can be moved by grabbing the highest card to other stacks on a card of a higher rank, but mixed ones cannot.
    • From time to time it is best to make cards in order, even if such a chain will consist of only 3-4 pieces.
    • Make complete sequences from king to ace as soon as possible, if possible, as a fully completed chain will be removed from the game and provide more possible moves.

    Options

    The following functional buttons are available to the participant:

    1. "New Game" is intended for generating a new game with a new layout that differs from the current one on the gaming table.
    2. "Start over" allows you to decompose the current layout in a new way. Usually used if the player realized that he could have replayed the game in a completely different way.
    3. "Undo move" is designed to cancel one or more player's moves. However, clicking on it increases the score counter.
    4. "Suggest a move" works similarly to the previous one, but is used to show the player the likely next steps.

    Mirror Spider • Leonid Kim • Science Picture of the Day at Elements • Arachnology

    " Of all the spiders that I had a chance to meet, no one, perhaps, could compete with this one in the elegance of jewelry on the abdomen, the beauty of which cannot be conveyed by any pencil in the world * ", - so admired the hero of today story described by the famous English arachnologist Octavius ​​Pickard-Cambridge. In the photo - mirror spider Thwaitesia (female). The genus is named after the English botanist and entomologist George Henry Kendrick Thwaites, who brought the type specimen from Ceylon to Picard-Cambridge.

    Mirror spiders are a relatively small genus, it includes 23 species. In 13 of them, sexually mature males have not yet been described, and one species - Thwaitesia nigronodosa - has been completely described from a young individual. The length of spiders is from two (males) to five (females) millimeters. These tiny disco balls (more precisely, disco cones) on legs shine in tropical forests, mainly in parts of Africa, South America, Madagascar, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Australia and Southeast Asia (to tell you the truth , some experts consider them ubiquitous in tropical latitudes).

    It is easy to distinguish a female from a male by the type of abdomen: in males it is not as high as in females, its height is less than the body length, while in females these parameters are close. In addition, males are smaller than females and their legs are longer in relation to the body. Also, the male tends to have thicker and larger pedipalps, resembling boxing gloves in appearance (see Fantastic Beasts picture of the day).

    Mirror spiders belong to the family of web spiders (Theridiidae), which also includes Karakurt, unlike it ( Latrodectus tredecimguttatus ) and other black widows ( Latrodectus ), and the smiling Hawaiian spider Theridion grallator (see picture of the day Smiling spider). But no matter how strange the spider may be, its relation to the spiders can be quite easily determined by the presence on the legs (last segment) of the last pair of legs of a special row of spikes that form a kind of “comb”. Therefore, spiders of this family are also called comb-footed spiders ( comb-footed spiders ).

    By and large, the covers of mirror spiders are not mirrored - they are transparent. The fact is that the main product of protein metabolism in spiders is guanine (yes, the very nitrogenous base that is part of DNA and RNA) - its crystals accumulate in guanocytes (cells of the digestive system) and scatter the incident light, giving a white color the pattern of the abdomen in a number of species of different families (see, for example, picture of the day Leaf-twisting spider). Cross at the cross-spider ( Araneus ) is a prime example of this.

    But the pattern on the cross is just white. What then is the reason for the silver luster of mirror spiders? It turns out that both the substance itself and its location in space create miracles. Guanine crystals look like thin plates and are folded in a certain way, alternating with amorphous, shapeless guanine. It turns out a kind of "sandwich". With this arrangement, guanine crystals perfectly reflect light, which creates the effect of a mirror surface.

    Again, what gives such a shine is not built into relatively static integuments, but into the cells of internal organs. And the internal organs (especially the digestive system) are no longer so static. If you watch the spider under high magnification, you can see the beating of the heart in the abdomen and the slow movement of the intestinal outgrowths.

    But the mirror spiders went further — they are able (albeit most likely involuntarily) to contract and expand these shiny plates, sometimes becoming like drops of silver or mercury:

    Although spiders of the genus Thwaitesia are called mirror, there are a number of other species that can easily compete for this title.


    Learn more