Fridge Lingo
Fridge Lingo ended up on my desk and I can’t to stop playing with it. It’s a set of 200 everyday words and phrases written in English, Pinyin and Chinese on magnets. So anyone in the house, including ayi, can write notes and leave them on the fridge.
99RMB from Lollipop, 3211 Hongmei Lu, Suite 606;
www.shanghailollipop.com

The fun continues with the Fridge Lingo now officially on the fridge at home. My young son Oliver, who’s 7, was very quiet while I was making dinner a few nights ago, then all of a sudden announced that he’d made a sentence with the Fridge Lingo. He’d started the sentence just right – Women jintian wanshang yao che (Tonight we want to eat) … and then had obviously looked for a food among the magnets and found “salary”. So thinking it was “celery” finished his sentence with “gongzi”. It’s not every day our family sits down to eat my salary, but we gave him 10/10 for coming up with the funniest sentence of the day.
Kids do say some really funny things…and that one is a winner!
I wonder if other people have a quick bit about funny stuff their kids say?
Nice of you to finally notice us again :)
We sent review copies to the City Weekend Magazines a few times already.
There are currently 3 sets available, although we’re currently sold out. We’ll have new stock by end of July though.
You can check out our official website at http://www.fridgelingo.com
We sell them in Beijing and Shanghai online via http://www.iwantone.cn or at selected retailers in Shanghai (like Lollipop).
Feel free to contact me if you need any more info.
Lawrence.
Should add for Lynette MacDonald, that the Food Set (the Green one) does have Celery in the set, so maybe you should buy a food set also to go with the Ayi Set (the blue set).
Lawrence.