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Tooth Fairy 2010 Watch Online
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Beginning
In early Europe, is a tradition to bury baby teeth that fell. [1] This combination of international tradition old has become one that is different from the Anglo-Saxon and Latin American cultures, among others.
The tooth is present the tradition in many cultures Western under different names. For example, in Spanish speaking countries, this character is called Tooth Fairy, a small mouse with a common surname, or simply "mouse Teeth" (mouse tooth). The "tooth fairy" character was created around 1894 by the priest Luis Coloma (1851-1915), later a member of the Royal Spanish Academy. The Crown asked Coloma to write a history of eight years old Alfonso XIII, as one of his teeth had fallen. A Ratón Pérez appeared in the history of the meaning of the bit of the mouse. The tooth fairy was used for marketing Colgate in Venezuela [2] and cites Spain [edit].
In Italy also the Tooth Fairy (Fatina) is often replaced by a mouse (Topino). In France, this character is called La Petite Souris ("The Rat"). Of the parts of the lowlands of Scotland is a similar tradition the story of the mouse: a history of buying the white rat teeth with coins.
In some Asian countries like India, Korea and Vietnam, when a child loses a tooth of the custom is that he or she must pull on the roof if it came from the lower jaw, or crawl space if it had the upper jaw. Thus, the child shouts a request for replacement teeth by the tooth of a mouse. This tradition based on the fact that mice's teeth keep growing throughout their lives, a characteristic of all rodents. In Japan, a variation of different requests that the loss of the upper teeth to be thrown directly into the soil and the lower teeth in the air, the idea is that incoming grow teeth straight. [Citation needed]
In some parts of India, young children offer their discarded milk tooth to the sun, sometimes wrapped in a small cloth clarification cotton] [Need lawn.
The Tooth Fairy is less common in African cultures.
Rosemary Wells, a former teacher Faculty of Dentistry, Northwestern University, found evidence to support the origin of different tooth fairies United States around 1900. Folklorist Tad Tuleja suggests the richness of the war, a culture of child-headed families, the media and myth into a habit. The Tooth Fairy, a playlet in three events for children by Esther Watkins Arnold, was published in 1927. On May 28, 1938, MGM has released The Little Rascals short entitled, The Terrible tooth, which the band has pledged to withdraw its teeth to make money from the tooth fairy [3]. A reference to American literature in the book 1949, "The Tooth Fairy" Rothgow Lee. Mr. Wells has created a tooth fairy Museum in 1993 in Deerfield, Illinois museum. In a Peanuts strip in March 1961, the new character Frieda asks if the price is established by the American Dental Society. The Tooth Fairy appeared on several children's books, a book for adults, and movies, and radio series of the same name.
A similar practice is found in Guatemala, where the dolls said the problems relate to children and under her pillow. Overnight, the wrist is estimated to fear the child can sleep, and sometimes even the address or resolve concerns. Like the tooth fairy, parents can withdraw the wrist at night to strengthen child's belief in the myth.
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