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Today, we tried to give our daughter a piggyback ride.
I'm not sure saying the above "a piggy back ride," but my dictionary gave me the expression.
Maybe "on my shoulder", not "on my back" which I guess usually means "a piggyback ride."
Anyway, my daughter looked happy, and of course we were. :)
1 comment:
Cute kid! Actually, both shoulders and back are considered 'piggyback rides', so you got it right. My oldest daughter calls getting on my back a 'horsey ride'. :)
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