Sunday, February 6, 2022

Dental Scam

Kids lose 20 teeth. That's a heckuva payday...for some of you

10 comments:

  1. Where did you get that in Argentina we leave the tooth in a glass of water? It's pretty much the same as the tooth fairy, except it's a mouse named Pérez that takes the tooth and leaves some money.

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    1. But in my family, in Washington State, U.S., we left our teeth in a glass of water in the kitchen and the tooth fairy traded them for coins. I thought it was peculiar when I heard of putting them under the pillow. How could you not wake up when the parental hand played the part of the tooth fairy?

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    2. Yeah I admit I must not have looked into the Argentinian one enough because sounds like most people are saying it's not true!

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  2. This one made me laugh, too! Love the ant's eyes as he takes the tooth...

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  3. I had heard that you only throw a lower tooth onto the roof: An upper tooth gets buried. The thought behind it is that the new tooth will grow towards the old one, so it will come in straight if a lower tooth grows roof-wards, and an upper tooth grows ground-wards.
    Our German friends feel very left out of the tooth traditions - they do nothing at all: no money, no rats, no fairies (no fun!)

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    1. Poor Germans. Losing a tooth is not a solid investment opportunity for them :(

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  4. I'd never heard of the "formichina dei denti" before :)
    A friend of mine reminded me of "Il topino dei denti" (variant: topolino dei denti), which I guess should be an older and more rooted tradition.
    "Fatina dei denti" sounds very familiar, but it also looks like a calque from English.

    PS
    That damn remind/remember/recall triad! It just won't stick in my mind...

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