The recruitment sergeant reputedly stuck a havercake on the top of his bayonet as an enticement for the tykes to enlist. |
|
He often surrounds himself with tykes, and buses in terminally ill children to play at his sprawling Neverland Valley ranch north of Los Angeles. |
|
Adults dig the clever scripts and inside jokes, while little tykes think the girls are adorable and thrill to their fast-paced adventures. |
|
At work neither of them would say boo to the proverbial goose, yet here they are behaving like a couple of irritating street tykes. |
|
A glance at the current spate of hotel marketing deals makes it clear that tykes are wielding some mighty power. |
|
I will spare you the lurid details and let my description of the four tykes suffice. |
|
The secret's out, as the 4,000 sweaty Mancs who witness the Yorkshire tykes triumph will tell you. |
|
Sweet making giant Cadbury has been accused of tampering with the taste buds of Yorkshire tykes. |
|
You would of thought all us Yorkshire tykes would of snapped them up by now! |
|
Robert LaFosse was the ringmaster who put these tykes through their paces with commanding smacks of a huge horsewhip. |
|
A full-bodied meal followed, and some of the more adventurous tykes in the party partook of what can only be described as a devilishly hot curry. |
|
If so, I'll happily settle into middle age and grump at the advertising people pandering to those young tykes with no respect. |
|
It thus produces a weiner that sprawls across the plate like an octopus, pleasing the young tykes aesthetically while also reducing the choking hazard. |
|
Both have been surrounded by cowbells and saddles since they were tykes. |
|
There is a wealth of wholesome periodical literature available, appealing to everyone from small tykes to millionaire tycoons. |
|
Whilst trying to make the melodies inaccessible, these cheeky tykes from Ozzy's old home city have only gone and made them all the more appealing. |
|
Hey, not all kids are irrepressible, mischievous, restless tykes! |
|
The place was deserted, save for myriad squirrels, but I found that some young tykes had tangled up the swings, so I did my bit for community service and untangled them. |
|
Little tykes will soon lose interest, leaving everything safe and sound. |
|
She remembered how wise and tempered Jake had seemed when she gazed into his eyes, even when he was the tiniest of tykes. |
|
|
For instance, if you are a children's performer you may not need to re-work the drum solo 100 times, but you will need to make sure the little tykes can sing that hooky chorus over and over and over and over again. |
|
Carter's features those photos of adorable tykes on its website, too. |
|
From layettes to snowsuits, with a wide range of diversified clothing for both day-to-day wear and special occasions, Deux par Deux dresses little tykes from 0 to 36 months old, as well as big kids from 2 to 16 years old. |
|
Maybe the tykes in Commerce's beloved child-care center could take up cubist fingerpainting and the cafeteria could feature paella. |
|
With the SA-45, the little tykes have what it takes to get in the groove. |
|
Tykes as young as 3, dressed in ski suits bright as jelly beans, slide happily down the bunny slope. |
|
But Dudgeon's career at Oakwell was blighted by a bout of post-viral syndrome which prevented him from making a League appearance for the Tykes. |
|
A swing set was purchased at an auction, and the area features a Little Tykes slide, picnic table, and sandbox. |
|
The high-flying Tykes had run up a record seven successive victories in the tournament before Durham knocked them off their perch last year. |
|
Newcastle won in 2004, and in 2005 the Leeds Tykes defeated Bath to win it for the first time. |
|
Cardiff Blues were matched with Italian minnows Calvisano, notoriously poor travellers USA Perpignan and the Leeds Tykes. |
|
Phil Davies, then coach of Leeds Tykes, replaced Jenkins at the Scarlets. |
|
Yorkshire Carnegie, formerly known as Leeds Tykes and Leeds Carnegie, are the foremost rugby union team in Leeds and they play at Headingley Carnegie Stadium. |
|
Yorkshire people have their own Yorkshire dialects and accents and are, or rather were, known as Broad Yorkshire or Tykes, with its roots in Old English and Old Norse. |
|