We have been tweeting long before the Internet was invented, and before Twitter was created. The local hide-and-seek innovation is a game called Nancy tweet-tweet that was once a favourite pastime usually played by older children on evenings while parents were chatting close by. There was a wily aspect of the game because it was also a cover-up for teenage romance, so if parents suspected their children were up to mischief they would tell them, "Hide where we could see allyuh."
In our game of Nancy tweet-tweet, the players shouted, "Nancy tweet-tweet," then hid somewhere. They changed their hiding positions often to make it difficult for the searcher to find them. Sometimes, players hid in the most obvious places to trick the searcher into looking for them elsewhere. When they were observed, the searcher called them out saying, "Nancy tweet-tweet."
In those days, we used to put zwills (razor blades or broken glass) on kite tails to cut the threads supporting the competitors' kites. Yuh had to manoeuvre yuh kite tail close to their kites so your zwill would cut the threads and ayo their kites, some people say like the new electoral proposals–Nancy tweet-tweet!
And, we played police and tief, which some big people think is a life sport–Nancy tweet-tweet! A favourite game was pitching marbles. In this game, a player ended up fartsing (pitching terminology) in the ring if he successfully knocked out his competitor's marble, but his marble stayed in the ring. He ended up losing–some people say like in a run-off election.