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Cooties is a fictitious childhood disease, commonly represented as childlore. It is used in the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and the Philippines as a rejection term and an infection tag game (such as Humans vs. Zombies). It is similar to the British "dreaded lurgi", and to terms used in the Nordic countries, in Italy, India and Iraq. A child is said to "catch" cooties through close contact with an "infected" person or from an opposite-sex child of a similar age.
Origin
The word is thought to originate from the Austronesian language family, in which the Philippine, Malaysian-Indonesian, and Māori languages have the word kuto or kutu for a parasitic biting insect. However, it is equally likely the name originated from "cuties", a cynical reference to the same. The earliest recorded uses of the term in English are by British soldiers during the First World War to refer to lice that proliferated in battlefield trenches.
A hand-held game, the Cootie Game, was made by the Irvin-Smith Company of Chicago in 1915; it involved tilting capsules (the cooties) into a trap over a background illustration depicting a battlefield. Other cootie games followed, all involving some form of "bug" or "cootie", until The Game of Cootie was launched in 1948 by Schaper Toys. This game was very successful, becoming an icon; in 2003, the Toy Industry Association included it on its "Century of Toys List" of the 100 most memorable and most creative toys of the 20th century.
In addition to the cooties games, the term cooties was popularised in America in the 1950s by military personnel coming back from service alongside the British in the South Pacific. Like the British 'dreaded lurgi', the cooties games developed during the early 1950s polio epidemic, and became associated with dirt and contagion.
Other terms
The lice of the First World War trenches nicknamed "cooties" were also known as "arithmetic bugs" because "they added to our troubles, subtracted from our pleasures, divided our attention, and multiplied like hell."
In Italy, children have the term la peste ("the plague"). Cooties are known in Denmark as pigelus and drengelus and in Norway as jentelus and guttelus: each pair meaning literally "girl lice" and "boy lice". In Sweden they are known as tjejbaciller and killbaciller (literally "girl/boy bacilli") and in Finland they are known as the tyttöbakteeri and poikabakteeri ("girl/boy bacteria"). In Serbia the game is known as šuga; the word means scabies.
Cooties game
A child is said to "catch" cooties through any form of bodily contact, proximity, or touching of an "infected" person or from a person of the opposite sex of the same age. Often the "infected" person is someone who is perceived as different, due to disability, shyness, being of the opposite sex, or having peculiar mannerisms. The phrase is most commonly used by children in elementary school aged from four to ten; however, it may be used by older children in a sarcastic or playful way.
In the United States, children sometimes "immunize" one another from cooties by administering a "cootie(s) shot". Typically, one child administers the "shot", using an index finger to trace circles and dots on another child's forearm while reciting the rhyme, "Circle, circle, Dot, dot, – Now you've got the cootie shot!" In some variations, a child then says, "Circle, circle, Square, square, – Now you have it everywhere!" In this case, the child receives an immunization throughout their body. These variations may continue to a final shot where the child says, "Circle, circle, Knife, knife, – Now you've got it all your life!". A number of other variations exist.
See also
Paper fortune teller – another name for Cootie Catcher
References
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Artikel Terkait "cooties"
Cooties - Wikipedia
Cooties is a fictitious childhood disease, commonly represented as childlore. It is used in the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and the Philippines as a rejection term and an …
Cooties (film) - Wikipedia
Cooties is a 2014 American zombie comedy film directed by Jonathan Milott and Cary Murnion from a screenplay that was written by Ian Brennan and Leigh Whannell.
What Are Cooties and Are They Real? - Cleveland Clinic Health …
13 Okt 2023 · Cooties are make-believe, but they teach children valuable lessons about infectious disease, public health and how society treats people when they get sick.
Cooties Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
From their bright uniforms to their fun-loving way of life, Cooties bring smiles and laughter to those "who most need it."
Cooties (2014) - IMDb
COOTIES is a horror comedy with unexpected laughs and unapologetic thrills. When a cafeteria food virus turns elementary school children into killer zombies, a group of misfit teachers must …
A Brief History of Cooties - Smithsonian Magazine
Of all the germs kids are exposed to on the playground, there’s one they freak out about more than any other: cooties. The word first appeared during World War I as soldiers’ slang for the...
Cooties: A Medical Guide - The New Yorker
11 Feb 2016 · Amy Collier explains how the disease of cooties is contracted and spread, and about how to fight it.
Watch Cooties (2014) - Free Movies | Tubi
In this horror-comedy, teachers have the worst Monday ever when they have to fight for their lives against their students-turned-killer savages.
Cooties (Film) - TV Tropes
Cooties is a Horror Comedy starring Elijah Wood, Alison Pill, and Rainn Wilson. The film centers around an ordinary elementary school that soon changes when a batch of contaminated …
Cooties - Rotten Tomatoes
Critics Consensus A horror-comedy without enough of either, Cooties is fatally content to skate by on its intriguingly oddball premise. Read Critics Reviews