

What we do know is that French court historian and poet, Jean Froissart (1337 – 1405) wrote of having played hide-and-go-seek in England as well as in France. It may also be a corruption of “ allez, allez” which is a Norman addition to the English language from French and is pronounced “ all-ay, all-ay.” The word “ allez” in French, of course, means “ go.” The ensuing “ in kommen frei” was a phrase popular in Dutch/German New York and Pennsylvania and meant “ come in free.” In this case, “ Allez, allez, in kommon frie” may have morphed into a French-English hybrid: “ Allez, allez, come in free!”

With minimal effort, it easily becomes: ollie, ollie, oxen free. Imagine how it sounds when excited children are running about, shouting this at the top of their lungs and it’s easy to see how it becomes this: aw-luh aw-luh owxin fry. When “ a lle, alle auch sind frei” is said in a normal speaking voice, phonetically it sounds somewhat like this: aw-luh aw-luh owhk zint fry. The most likely explanation for the phrase is that it is a corruption of the German “ Alle, alle auch sind frei” which, when translated, means “ Everyone, everyone also is free.”

And so, errors in passing the sayings down from generation to generation is not unlike the misheard lyrics of popular songs over the decades. That’s because they’ve been passed down orally from one generation to the next, with no adult intervention or correction. In Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell, if a player shoots an enemy and then hides, the player is hunted down with the phrase “ Ollie, ollie, oxen free! Come out, come out wherever you are!”Īside from that, it’s hard to find published references to the phrase “ ollie, ollie, oxen free.”Ĭhildren’s sayings were hardly recorded until the 1950s, and even then, the sayings are very variable. In the video games, Halo: The Fall of Reach and Halo: First Strike, the phrase “ ollie, ollie, oxen free” is used a number of times to pass along information to other members of the team.
