House, also referred to as "playing house" or "play grown up", is a traditional children's game. It is a form of make-believe where players take on the roles of a nuclear family. Common roles include parents, children, a newborn, and pets.
The game often involves props, such as toy food or mock-up kitchen appliances. Additionally, dolls or other forms of toys can play the role of family members. Model houses and play kitchens are toys which are often specifically intended for playing house. The game is played both at home and in kindergarten or day care.
In other cultures
- In Chinese, the game is called "æÂ®å®¶å®¶éÂ
Â" or "è¿Âå®¶å®¶" (playing/living a family).
- In Dutch, the game is called "vadertje en moedertje" (little father and little mother).
- In German, the game is called "Mutter, Vater, Kind" (mother, father, child).
- In Hungarian, the game is called "papás-mamás" (fatherly-motherly).
- In Italian, the game is called "mamma casetta"(mother little home).
- In Japanese, the game is called "ã¾ã¾ãÂÂã¨"(playing cooking).
- In Persian, the common term (îçÃÂàèçòàor ÃÂ
çÃÂ
çàèçòÃÂ) means "mother play" or "auntie play", highlighting that the game is stereotypically played by girls.
- In Russian, the game is called ôþÃÂúø-üðÃÂõÃÂø (daughters-and-mothers).
- In Swedish, the game is called "Mamma, pappa, barn" (mother, father, child).
- In Spanish, the game is often called "jugar a la casita/familia" (playing House/Family).
- In Hindi, the game is called "ghar-ghar" (house-house)
- In Thai, the game is called "à ¸Âà ¹Âà ¸Âà ¹Âà ¸¡à ¹Âà ¸¥à ¸¹à ¸Â" (father, mother, child).
- In Indonesian, the game is called "Rumah-rumahan" (fake house).
See also
References