I've read your latest question
Front to back and to and fro
But I can't figure here and now
Just what you want to know
I first encountered this in school
A metered counting rhyme
I don't remember more than that
Being seven at the time
There is a slightly different take
For fans of rhythm and blues
Elvis used to sing it at the
Start of "Blue Suede Shoes."
I have found citations
Dated Eighteen Seventy-Two
Anything more you need to know
Write us back and give us a clue
The original is "One for the money, two for the show, three to get ready, and four to go." The origins seem to be lost in time, but it seems to be based on horse racing. The jingle is used by children as a countdown to start races, and variations on it can be found in children's books from the 1800s. (The rhyme appears as "One for the money, two for the show, three to get ready, now go cat, go" in Elvis Presley's "Blue Suede Shoes", written by Carl Perkins in 1956. In that context it means "get ready, folks, we're taking off!" Carl Perkins likely remembered it from his own childhood. He did NOT originate it. I was a child in the late 1940s and '50s, and we used it then.)
0.34
4/9
9 tables and 12 stools
Four.
Two for the show. Three to get ready. And four to go.
Three to get ready now go cat go
The original is "One for the money, two for the show, three to get ready, and four to go." The origins seem to be lost in time, but it seems to be based on horse racing. The jingle is used by children as a countdown to start races, and variations on it can be found in children's books from the 1800s. (The rhyme appears as "One for the money, two for the show, three to get ready, now go cat, go" in Elvis Presley's "Blue Suede Shoes", written by Carl Perkins in 1956. In that context it means "get ready, folks, we're taking off!" Carl Perkins likely remembered it from his own childhood. He did NOT originate it. I was a child in the late 1940s and '50s, and we used it then.)
three or four months.
Either four to three minutes or longer.
The first four episodes were made in 1934
It will take you three to four months for your belly to show the sign.
"run the show" by kat deluna
The earliest signs of pregnancy can show as soon as three or four days in, if one is expecting one's period. Otherwise, one notices signs three to four weeks into the pregnancy.
Step one: move to a large city. Step two: make as many friends as possible. Step three: show up to work on time (early if possible) and ready. Step four: Be persistent and don't give up.
0.34
The show is about three or four years old.