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Seksek - Hopscotch
part of the game is called “birli çiftli iç ya da dış” (single, double, inside or outside). After this part of the game, the player turns his back to the squares and throws the stone over his shoulder to any square. The square on which the stone fell is then considered the player ’s “kuma” (lit. “second wife”). When he comes to the square during the game, he may stand with both feet or open his eyes. If a player throws his stone on his opponent’s “kuma,” then he is “stuck” and can’t continue. The game is over when all the squares have been taken as “kuma.”
Subaşı
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This game is played outside by five or six people. According to the order in which they’ll play, the players put their sticks in a row, one pace apart. A player hops over the sticks on one foot and returns to where he began. He must do this three times without knocking a stick from its place and without touching his other foot to the ground. If he succeeds, he takes his own stick and leaves the game. If he fails, he must wait until it is his turn again. If the space between the sticks is widened by the removal of a stick, then they can be moved closer together.
Tavşan Kaç - Run Away Rabbit
The children form a circle holding hands. One of the children is the rabbit, the other is the hound. The rabbit waits inside the circle, the hound outside. The children in the circle go around in a circle and say the rhyme below and the rabbit does various things according to the rhyme. At the end of the rhyme, the rabbit runs and the hound tries to catch him. If the rabbit is caught, he becomes the hound in the next game.
Hendekte bir tavşan uyuyordu