Children in greece will toss their baby teeth onto the roof and make a wish for their teeth to grow strong and healthy.
Throwing teeth on the roof greece.
Egyptian children throw their lost teeth to the sun wrapped it in tissue.
Take sow my tooth and give me an iron one so.
Children in greece throw their teeth on the roof for good luck.
This tradition has to do with the direction of how the roots grow.
In japan and korea it is believed that tossing your bottom teeth on the roof of your home and your top teeth underneath the house ensures healthy growth.
Then they make a wish that their adult teeth will be healthy and strong.
But the most common tradition seems to be throwing the tooth onto the roof.
They also recite a little rhyme which comes out to something like take sow my tooth and give me an iron one so that i can chew rusks in some regions of greece it is a mouse not a sow which is invoked.
Infact in greece the throwing of the tooth onto the roof is accompanied by the reciting of a little rhyme which can be loosely translated as follows.
Children in greece throw their teeth on the roof for good luck.
In brazil cameroon botswana benin nigeria morocco mauritania greece georgia india sri lanka cambodia indonesia singapore thailand vietnam china japan korea and taiwan children are told by their parents to throw their fallen teeth onto their roof.
Japan has a belief that separates their lower and upper teeth.
Then they make a wish that their adult teeth will be healthy and strong.
In the united states we have the tooth fairy but there are many other beliefs and traditions around the world.
Historically kids who lose teeth from their lower jaw will throw their teeth onto their roof while upper jaw teeth go on the floor or even under it the idea is the new tooth will be pulled.
Children in guatemala put their tooth under their pillow and wait for a mouse to take their tooth away and leave them some money.
Then they make a wish that their adult teeth will be healthy and strong.