سَزٕ لۄٚنٛگ چھُ بٲزی ہِنٛز اَکھ مشہوٗر بٲزؠ یَتھ مَنٛز کھلٲڑؠ اَکھ لۄکٹ چیز ٹاس کران چھِ، یَتھ لیٚگر ونان چھِ، نمبر دار مثلثن مَنٛز یا زمیٖنس پؠٹھ بیان کردٕ مستطیلن ہنٛدؠ نمونن مَنٛز تہٕ پتہٕ چھِ جاین مَنٛز کوٚرن یا کوٚرن تہٕ چیز چھ واپس حٲصل کران۔[1][2][3] یہِ چھےٚ بچن ہنٛد کھیل یس واریاہن کھلاڑؠن سٟتؠ یا وٲحد ِگنٛدِتھ ہیٚکو۔ سزٕ لۄٚنٛگ چھےٚ اَکھ جسمٲنی تہٕ علمی ورزش۔[4][5][6]

سَزٕ لۄٚنٛگ
مُلُکملیشیا
Intangible cultural heritage statusNational Inventory of Intangible Cultural Heritage in Malaysia

حَوالہٕ جات

اؠڈِٹ
  1. Gold، David L. (Spring 1981). "Three New-York-Cityisms: Sliding Pond, Potsy, and Akey". American Speech. 56 (1): 17–32. doi:10.2307/454476. JSTOR 454476. In the 1950s, the game was called hopscotch and the object thrown a lagger /'lagar/. "Lagger" is related to the verb "lag"
  2. Baker، Kate (10 January 2015). "Laggers". Kathleen, Kage and the Company. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  3. "Definition of HOPSCOTCH". Merriam-Webster ( اَنگیٖزؠ زَبانہِ مَنٛز). Retrieved 15 March 2022. a child's game in which a player tosses an object (such as a stone) into areas of a figure outlined on the ground and hops through the figure and back to regain the object
  4. Laely، Khusnul؛ Yudi، Dede (17 December 2018). "The Impact of Hopscotch Game towards the Growth of Kinesthetic Intelligence on 3-4 Year Old Children". Early Childhood Research Journal. 1 (1): 21–28. doi:10.23917/ecrj.v1i1.6581. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  5. Welsh، Richard O. (June 2017). "School Hopscotch: A Comprehensive Review of K–12 Student Mobility in the United States". Review of Educational Research. 87 (3): 475–511. doi:10.3102/0034654316672068. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  6. Mccarthy، Cheryl؛ Connell، Gill (20 June 2012). "WHY HOPSCOTCH MATTERS". Moving Smart. Retrieved 15 March 2022.