Participants learned the old lullabies and folk songs of their mothers and grandmothers joyfully and enthusiastically. |
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My ever-present guard watched as I gently sang them lullabies and tucked them into their trundle beds. |
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There are wedding songs, ritual songs, cult songs, lullabies, healing songs, and work songs. |
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Her soprano lullabies and fun character allowed the audience to laugh and be merry. |
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Every language had its stock of lullabies, nursery rhymes, nonsense verses, fairytales and simple stories of light and delight. |
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Children are encouraged to sing songs during the day and lullabies before they sleep. |
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One of the earliest lullabies in English was written during the time of King Edward II of England in the 14th century. |
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Whenever possible, the lullabies and poems of the lower and middle years should be sung or presented by phonograph records. |
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Their traditional music includes work songs, hymns, lullabies, ballads, and healing songs. |
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Whether it be a new tune or a timeless classic, these lullabies are sure to do the trick and calm even the most active youth. |
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Frederik and the groomers are traditional Damara people and sing church songs and harmonic lullabies as they tend to the horses. |
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Kara's voice was more subtle, and her soft lullabies on quiet Alabama nights made it seem as though everything was right with the world. |
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This unique collection contains 42 of the most beautiful German lullabies. It ranges from the folk song to the simple art song. |
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Take more walks, sing more lullabies, spend less time trying to get her to eat string beans and more time pushing the stroller along the boardwalk. |
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It includes Italian music of the eighteenth and nineteenth century from lullabies to Salentine pizziche and Neapolitan serenades. |
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There are bouncing rhymes, playtime pat-a-cake rhymes and lullabies to help wind down at the end of a busy day. |
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Performance contexts include manioc-beer-drinking rituals, shamanic rituals, funeral rites, lullabies, love songs, and laments. |
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For little ones having a good night, a CD of 15 pop and modern lullabies, pair with felt grey sheeps baby mobile. |
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Listening to her sing as you read along in the text, you realize that these lullabies are love songs. |
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Along the way, watch out for alligators that dance 'til midnight, hippopotamuses that hum lullabies and slugs that sing opera! |
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While singing lullabies and chanting nursery rhymes to our babies, we are establishing a relationship of trust and security. |
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His romances, waltzes, songs and lullabies appeared over the course of two decades, beginning soon after his arrival in Montréal. |
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In this collection are old British and American ballads, Civil War songs, blues, frolic tunes, children's games, nonsense songs, lullabies, spirituals, and more. |
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In the world of today, there is a need of the power of lullabies. |
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She would write lullabies for him and his elder sister, Gabrielle, and he grew up listening to her playing the piano and singing. |
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The Miracle lullabies and love songs, combined with Anne's images of these beautiful babies, is a unique project that means a great deal to us. |
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Parents and babies will love the lullabies and familiar rhymes that can be sung and recited together. |
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To amuse their friends and the children, Mary played traditional jigs, reels and lullabies, on the violin and harmonica. |
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This extraordinary collection of lullabies will appear in two separate, attrative CD cases. |
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You can start and stop these lullabies both directly on the camera unit and via the monitor unit. |
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Clément often rocked Celine to sleep by singing her lullabies and he used to carry around a picture of a smiling six year old Celine as his lucky charm. |
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He prohibited me from speaking my language to my son, from singing my son lullabies in my language, from massaging my son, allegedly because it was considered as an incestuous practice in Quebec culture. |
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The piece is inspired by Italian music from the 18th and 19th centuries, from lullabies to the pizziche of Salento, and with a nod to Neapolitan serenades. |
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While still rooted in the computerized pulse of techno, it moves through passages of surly rock, twangy Western soundtracks, and gentle, watery electronic lullabies. |
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Because the harmony is generally triadic the lullabies are only moderately difficult to read. |
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Clément often sang lullabies to Celine while putting her to sleep. He also had a habit of carrying a photo of Celine with him, taken when she was six years old in which she is smiling. |
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If the stick man kneels and is cradling an invisible child in it's arms, then the stick man is a woman. The signing of lullabies to babies in your crossed arms is apparently quite contrary to manhood, in old China that is. |
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In Spain, parents will sing lullabies or tell rhymes to children, warning them that if they do not sleep, El Coco will come and get them. |
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The earliest vernacular children's songs in Europe are lullabies from the later medieval period. |
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The oldest children's songs of which we have records are lullabies, intended to help a child sleep. |
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Until the modern era lullabies were usually only recorded incidentally in written sources. |
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There were, for another thing, the lullabies. |
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Play soft music, lullabies or sing to your child. |
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