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Hello! I'm Lyrkit!

I tried many ways to memorize English words and found the most effective one for me!

We already have all the words of the songs that we have heard throughout our lives in our memory. We simply did not pay attention to them, but we all already hear them!

I noticed that when you learn a new word from a song that you have already heard before, you already know the translation of this word forever and you will never forget it!

I want to share this method with you. So, the scheme is as follows.

We find songs that we have already heard.

We add all unfamiliar words from them.

We pass mini tests of memory games. done

Now that you know a lot of words, you will very quickly come to know the whole language!

I bet you'll be surprised how effective this method is!)

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C. W. McCall

Nishnabotna

 

Nishnabotna

(album: Rubber Duck - 1976)


One time when I's growing up it was when I's a kid there was nothing to do at home so I called up on a friend an' said "Let's pack us a box lunch an' go down to the Nishnabotna an' go swimming. An' maybe look for some toads"

My friend said he thought that's a good idea 'cause he didn't have nothing to do either an' he was outta toads

So we packed up our box lunches an' we started out a-walking, an' we come to a big iron bridge which was five miles from town where we observed a big sign which says "West Nishnabotna". I says "This here's the place, an', an' now if we could just find some toads an' go for a good swim, we could have fun all day doing nothing, just loafing around in the creek"

We jumped into that dirty water an' I thought we might be able to swim in it, but we quickly discovered that we could not even begin to dog-paddle in it. Be, because right where we was, the Nishnabotna was only four-an'-a-half inches deep. So we wound up a-crawling along down on all fours in it, through the mud an' beer cans an' yucky things an' old pieces a' cars

We went past a bunch a' fenders an' a couple a' Plymouth hubcaps, when we come to a place where we thought there might be some toads. When we was surprised by a farmer who told us to get on out of there an' to never come back or he'd call up the sheriff an' have us put into jail for the rest of our natural-born lives with nothing to eat but bread an' water so we'd starve

But time passes by real quickly when you're having fun, so we ran through the fenders and the mud to the bridge again. But when we got back there we sadly discovered that the sun had been out and our backs was all blistered so bad we had to lay flat on our bellies for two weeks in bed which made us sick to our stomachs an' we didn't care about nothing anymore

It just ain't too good for your livers to go swimming in that river. You can get cut up pretty bad in there an' there ain't too many toads

There's nothing but, there's nothing but mud in there an' there's all kinds a' crud, an' it's laying all over the place so you'd better watch out

If you wanna get sick, just go crawling around in that creek. There's a whole lot a' bad things that can happen to you

No, it ain't, no, it ain't good for your liver to hunt toads in that river. The West Nishnabotna is the creek of my childhood

done

Did you add all the unfamiliar words from this song?