Squeaky toy

A squeaky toy (also squeak toy, squeaker toy, or squeeze toy) is a soft, hollow toy made from flexible materials such as rubber or vinyl, and usually equipped with a small device known as a squeaker.

Mechanism

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When the toy is squeezed, air is forced through the squeaker, resulting in a high-pitched sound, such as a squeak, or the sound of a toy horn or whistle. The tone and duration of the sound may depend on the size of the squeaker, the amount of air squeezed out of the toy, and the speed with which it is squeezed. When the toy is not being squeezed, it resumes its normal shape and re-inflates. Air returning into the toy through the squeaker may or may not make a sound, depending on the design of the squeaker and the speed at which air re-enters.

The high-pitched noise produced by squeaky toys quickly attracts the attention of infants and small children, while their soft, squeezable nature makes them safe for young children to handle. Squeaky toys are also popular with pets, and examples shaped like bones or small furry animals are commonly marketed for dogs.

History

Squeaky toys made of rubber first appeared in 1860. In the 1930s, technical advances made painting them easier.{{cite news|url=https://www.dispatch.com/story/lifestyle/2007/03/18/old-rubber-squeak-toys-still/23798757007/|title=Old rubber squeak toys still can be found cheap|work=The Columbus Dispatch|date=2007-03-20|accessdate=2024-09-16}} The first squeaky toys were simple rubber balls which produced a high pitched noise when air was squeezed through a hole, without a special noise maker. Later examples contained a metal noisemaker known as a "whistle disk." Brightly colored rubber squeaky toys molded in various shapes became common during the 1940s. Later examples were molded from durable vinyl, and plastic squeakers replaced metal whistles.L. H. MacKenzie, Squeaky Toys: A Collector's Handbook & Price Guide (Schiffer Publishing, 1998).

Squeaky toys may be modeled after popular cartoon characters, or used as promotional advertising. There are squeaky toy collectors, and published guides with typical selling prices.

Nature's squeaky toys

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Small animals are sometimes compared with squeaky toys. A particularly apt example is the desert rain frog, the subject of a widely viewed video titled "World's Cutest Frog," regularly described as making a noise like a squeaky toy. The resemblance is enhanced by the fact that the frog vocalizes by inflating its body, and then exhaling (relatively) large quantities of air, as if being squeezed.{{cite news|url=https://www.cnn.com/videos/us/2013/02/22/tsr-moos-cutest-frog-goes-viral.cnn|title='World's Cutest Frog' makes weird sound|last=Moos|first=Jeanne|work=CNN|accessdate=2024-09-16}} The calls of certain birds have also been compared to squeaky toys; in particular those of the western kingbird, Mississippi kite, and sulphur-bellied flycatcher of North America, and the blue nuthatch of southeast Asia.

References