A bag of sugar, a bag of fruit, grandma bought a fish to cook. ?
The head is not ripe, the tail is burnt, and it squeaks in the bowl, which hurts to eat. ?
Jump, jump, jump on the fish bridge, and the baby smiled happily.
This is a version, and there are two popular "shake", one is:
Shake, shake, shake to Waipo Bridge. Grandma calls me a good baby.
Please eat sugar, please eat cake, sugar, cake, don't be full.
Eat less and taste more, eat more and taste less.
This educational component is relatively heavy, and it was once selected as a primary school Chinese textbook.
The other is:
Shake, shake, shake to Waipo Bridge. Grandma calls me a good baby.
My name is Grandma Yang Paopao, and Grandma calls me Little Red!
Extended data:
"Shake, shake, shake to Waipo Bridge" is a children's song, a Cantonese folk song, sung in Cantonese.
Popular folk songs endowed with national colors are called folk songs or ballads. Folk songs have a long history, so most of their authors are unknown.
Folk songs are rich in content, including religion, love, war, labor, drinking, dancing, festivals and so on. Folk songs express the feelings and habits of a nation, so each has its own unique scale and emotional style.
For example, the prosperity of French folk songs, the enthusiasm of Italian folk songs, the simplicity of English folk songs, the indignation of Japanese folk songs, the wildness of Spanish folk songs and the tears of China folk songs all show strong national temperament and color.