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Published by: smith 2010-03-18
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  • Looking for the secret to the children's game called Millie Tillie. Example, "Millie Tillie likes cars but she doesn't like buses". Or Millie Tillie likes ice cream but she doesn't like sherbet". My nephew learned it at summer camp and I want to know the secret.
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  • Are you quite certain that the examples, "Millie Tillie likes cars but she doesn't like buses" and "Millie Tillie likes ice cream but she doesn't like sherbet" are accurate? I remember a "Silly Sally" game from my years as a Girl Scout counselor, but the examples that you give would not fit it. In the game that we played at camp, Silly Sally likes coffee but she doesn't like tea. Silly Sally likes cheese but she doesn't like bologna. Silly Sally likes battles but she doesn't like wars. Silly Sally likes Halloween, but she doesn't like Christmas. Silly Sally likes kangaroos, but she doesn't like koalas. And so forth. I've also seen the same game called "Skinny Minnie." I can tell you the secret to this game, if it sounds like the right one. There's another, similar game (with a different "rule") called "Grandma Likes" or "Aunt Em Likes." Grandma likes coffee but she doesn't like tea. She likes shoes, but she doesn't like feet. She likes rice, but she doesn't like potatoes. She likes ice cream, but doesn't like sherbet. She likes gossip, but she doesn't like tattletales. If the cars/buses and ice cream/sherbet examples are accurate, they wouldn't fit the mold of either of these games. I can think of two possible rules that might apply to cars/buses and ice cream/sherbet, but I'd need to see more examples to be certain. Can your nephew remember a few more examples, perhaps?
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  • As mentioned by a commenter, it's also possible that Millie Tillie likes things whose names contain the letter 'A' (cars, ice cream) and dislikes things whose names do not contain this letter. A bit of experimenting will enable you to discover the rule, and your nephew will be delighted to puzzle his friends with the game!
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  • And silly sally likes repeated letters?


  • Is it possibly something to do with the letter A?


  • The names of the games you give may infact be the same game as Millie Tillie likes this or that. The game just may have undergone name changes throughtout the years. To be honest I'm trying to find out the secret without the knowledge of my nephew. He and his mother say we (my husband and I) will feel quite foolish when we discover the secret as it's so simple.


  • I'm going to go out on a limb here. Since you've provided only two examples of Millie Tillie's likes and dislikes, I cannot be certain that I have the correct answer. But I will give some examples of other instances of this kind of game, and the unifying principle behind the rules. The secret is that the "likes" and "dislikes" have nothing to do with the meaning of the words, but only with the spelling of the words. In the "Silly Sally" game that my troop of Girl Scouts played at camp, the rule was that Silly Sally liked anything whose name contained double letters, and she disliked anything that didn't have double letters in its name. So she would like waffles (since the word contains double F's) while she'd dislike pancakes (since the word has no double letters.) A few more samples should give you the idea: Silly Sally likes: Silly Sally doesn't like: The moon The sun Cheddar and Swiss Gouda and Parmesan Beer Wine Betty Veronica The other example that I gave, the "Grandma" version, is even easier. It generally starts out with "Grandma likes coffee, but she doesn't like tea." It turns out that grandma dislikes anything whose name contains the letter 'T' (youngsters are usually really amused by the T/tea pun in this). Of course, the coffee/tea thing works with Silly Sally, too, since the word "coffee" has double letters, and "tea" does not. If the examples that you gave, "Millie Tillie likes cars but she doesn't like buses" and "Millie Tillie likes ice cream but she doesn't like sherbet" are accurate, I see a couple of possibilities. Millie Tillie may like anything whose name contains the letter 'C' (which is present in "cars" and in "ice cream.") Or Millie Tille may dislike anything that contains the letter 'B' (which is present in "buses" and in "sherbet." More examples will help you to home in on the exact rule. The key is to concentrate on the spelling of the word, rather than its meaning or connotations. Here's a good description of the game in its "Aunt Em" incarnation: "You might be familiar with the guessing game that begins with the leader saying something like, 'Aunt Em likes apples, but she doesn't like oranges.' The goal for the group of players is to induce the principle governing Aunt Em's likes and dislikes. Each person proposes various statements about Aunt Em's likes and dislikes, and the leader lets the group know which statements are correct. For incorrect statements, it is helpful for the leader to provide a new correct example that is somehow related to the proposed example. A session might go something like this (L is the leader and P represents various players): L: Aunt Em likes apples, but she doesn't like grapes. P1: Aunt Em likes peaches, but she doesn't like cherries. L: No, Aunt Em likes cherries, but she doesn't like peaches. P2: Aunt Em likes basketball, but she doesn't like baseball. L: Actually, Aunt Em likes all kinds of ball, but she doesn't like sports. The leader might clarify from the beginning that this is a word game so that players look for patterns within the words themselves rather than in the concepts the words represent. Once a player induces the pattern, he or she can assume the leader's role or can provide other correct examples, each of which provides additional clues to the pattern. The rest of the group continues to try to induce the pattern. If students remain stumped after some time, it can be helpful for them to write the names of things Aunt Em likes in one column and the names of things she doesn't like in another. Seeing the words can help students recognize the pattern. This can be a great game to play on a car trip, around a campfire, whenever there are a few unexpected moments." Grammar and More: LinguaPhile, September 2001 http://www.grammarandmore.com/edu/archive/issue14.htm The PBS children' show "ZOOM" has a recurring skit about "Fannee Doolee," who likes only things whose names contain double letters: "The trick to Fannee Doolee is that she likes anything with double letters. So, Fannee Doolee likes swEEts, but she doesn't like candy. She likes dEEr and mOOse, but she doesn't like antelope. She enjoys a gOOd guFFaw, but she doesn't like to laugh." PBS Kids: ZOOM http://pbskids.org/zoom/help/faq/other.html#7_toFannee Here are some online versions of similar games: Jenny's Likes and Dislikes http://www.angelfire.com/ak/rschmidt/jennyLikes.html Mentoring Project: What Minnie Likes http://www.mentoringproject.com/wml1.html Alan Rosenspan: The Perfect Brainstorm http://www.alanrosenspan.com/recent_pubs/perfect_brainstorm.html Inkspiration Forums: Time for a different game http://www.inkspiration.net/forums/archive/index.php/t-896.html Google search strategy: Google Web Search: "likes * but she doesn't like" ://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=UTF-8&q=%22likes+*+but+she+doesn%27t+like%22 I hope this has been helpful. If you have any questions, or if I've been unclear, please request clarification; I'll be glad to offer further assistance before you rate my answer. Best wishes, pinkfreud





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