Step 1 : Introduction to the question "4. A short way over, a few girls are throwing stones into a grid drawn on the ground, then hopping around the squares and picking up the stones. This game you know is called Kith-Kith in India and Escargot in France, but what is it called in Australia?"
...1. Tic-Tac-Toe 2. Checkers 3. Hopscotch 4. Snails Hopscotch is played on a grid of some kind drawn in the dirt, or with chalk on the cement if it is raining. You take your turn throwing your taw (usually a stone) into a square and then hopping around the grid, picking up your taw along the way. Of course, if anyone else's taw was already in a square, you were not allowed to jump in that square, nor could your taw touch the other person's taw. In Australia, back in the old days (because I'm old) we would run around the playground at lunchtime, and most games were played on a bare strip of ground where grass never got the chance to grow. Another variation of hopscotch that was popular at my school was played in a 4 X 4 grid. The object of this game was to hop around the grid, kicking your taw from one square to the next without kicking it out of the grid, touching the lines or falling over yourself. The first recorded mention of hopscotch was back in the 17th century when it was called Scotch-hoppers. Hopscotch is played in most countries around the world, with different variations of the same theme prevalent in each country.
Step 2 : Answer to the question "4. A short way over, a few girls are throwing stones into a grid drawn on the ground, then hopping around the squares and picking up the stones. This game you know is called Kith-Kith in India and Escargot in France, but what is it called in Australia?"
Hopscotch:
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