"Tip-Tap-Tip" (often extended as "Tip-Tap-Tip-Tap") appears in various literary and musical pieces, most famously in children's literature and rhythmic songs. Key Cultural References
: An Estonian songwriter released a children's song titled "Tip-Tap-Tip" in 2016 as part of the album Iga Ilmaga . Tip-Tap-Tip
: In Beatrix Potter's 1903 story, The Tailor of Gloucester , the tailor hears the "tip tap, tip tap, tip tap tip!" of mice working under tea-cups as they help him finish his work for Christmas morning. : It is a popular rhythmic rain poem
: It is a popular rhythmic rain poem found in primary school textbooks (such as Class 1 English). The lines typically describe the sound of raindrops: "Tip-tap, tip-tap, rain falls from the sky / The sun goes down, waving goodbye". Music : Other Uses
: The phrase is also used in various European Christmas songs, such as the Finnish "Tip-Tap" (often titled "Tonttujen jouluyö"), which mimics the sound of marching elves. Other Uses