Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We called them both, but this reminds me of the game "Chutes and Ladders." I've been told that in England they call them chutes- is that true?
Ummm, the game is called “snakes and ladders”.
I am from Montreal and we used both terms. Chute is slide in French.
No, it is not. A chute is a waterfall. A slide is a glissoire, toboggan but everyone calls it a "glissade".
The game is called Serpents et échelles (Snakes and Ladders)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Toboggan. France.
Tobogán. South America.
In English a toboggan is a sled (the thing you sit or lie on in winter to slide down a hill of snow). Still has to do with sliding, so maybe the same root. 38 from Philly here -- we mostly called them sleds, but my dad is from Detroit and he and my grandparents still call them toboggans, and all the books I read as a kid called them toboggans also.
Of course, we don't get enough snow now to really break them out and my kids are too young for them yet anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We called them both, but this reminds me of the game "Chutes and Ladders." I've been told that in England they call them chutes- is that true?
Ummm, the game is called “snakes and ladders”.
I am from Montreal and we used both terms. Chute is slide in French.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We called them both, but this reminds me of the game "Chutes and Ladders." I've been told that in England they call them chutes- is that true?
Ummm, the game is called “snakes and ladders”.
The game board has an illustration showing actual snakes, not playground slides.


Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We called them both, but this reminds me of the game "Chutes and Ladders." I've been told that in England they call them chutes- is that true?
Ummm, the game is called “snakes and ladders”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Toboggan. France.
Tobogán. South America.
In English a toboggan is a sled (the thing you sit or lie on in winter to slide down a hill of snow). Still has to do with sliding, so maybe the same root. 38 from Philly here -- we mostly called them sleds, but my dad is from Detroit and he and my grandparents still call them toboggans, and all the books I read as a kid called them toboggans also.
Anonymous wrote:Slide, 41.
I'm from Alaska, though, so butt-burning wasn't much of an issue. I'm not even sure I owned any shorts as a kid.
Teeter-totter or see-saw?