1977, Ruth Ehrig McGrath, Developing Concepts of Health in Early Childhood, D.O.K. Publishers, →ISBN, uncertain page
Make a twister mat of any of the four groups. For example a Fruit and Vegetable Twister.
1995, David Vale and Anne Feunteun, Teaching Children English, A Training Course for Teachers of English to Children, Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 70
Play twister or bingo with the colours.
2001, Philip H. Isles, Polyverse, part 1, The Fulcrum, Buy Books on the web (publisher), →ISBN, page 124
[…]the car stopped suddenly, causing everyone to fall on the floor[…]at which point we found ourselves in a pile of limbs, like a game of twister in three dimensions.
2001, Samuel A. Berne, Without ritalin, A Natural Approach to ADD, McGraw-Hill Professional, →ISBN, page 87
Play twister, hide and seek, dot to dot, and visual maze games.
2002, Lauren J. Lieberman and Cathy Houston-Wilson, Strategies for Inclusion, Human Kinetics, →ISBN, page 131
Student can correctly play twister with peers, and can consistently assist others when they are having trouble understanding what to do in the game
2003, Sleazegrinder (compiler), Gigs from Hell, True Tales of Rock and Roll Gone Wrong, Critical Vision, →ISBN, page 22
The twister mat became so slippery that we said, "the hell with the costumes", and just got naked and slipped and slid all over the stage.
2005, Ted Purves, what we want is free, generosity and exchange in recent art, SUNY Press, →ISBN, page 24
sheer excess, a game of twister with ten thousand people
2005, Tracy Michigan, Get Dicey, Play Craps and Have Fun, Falbe Publishing, →ISBN, page 22
Craps is not to be confused with the free-for-all at the roulette wheel where players twine over the table like it is a twister mat.
2006, Rosemary Callard-Szulgit and Greg Karl Szulgit, Mind-bending Math and Science Activities for Gifted Students, Rowman & Littlefield Education, →ISBN, uncertain page
In Bean-Bag Hop!, students use a modified twister mat and toss bean bags onto the prenumbered circles.
2007, Erica Eaton, Ph.D. and Tara Smelt, Liminal:, Spaces-in-between Visible and Invisible, Lulu.com (publisher), →ISBN, page 7
If the final form should be, you know, a game of twister, well then that's what it's going to be.
2008, Jay Rayner, The Man Who Ate the World, In Search of the Perfect Dinner, Macmillan, →ISBN, page 157
I tried to do the roll with my index finger and my digits ended up in an uncomfortable muddle, a confusing game of twister.
2008, Paul Ruditis, Show, Don't Tell, Simon and Schuster, →ISBN, page 109
“And it gets way cozier when we have parties with a few dozen of our closest friends,” Marq said. “A friendly game of twister can turn deadly when you've only got four feet of floor space.”
2008, Suzanne V. Reese, Where Hearts Prosper, Cedar Fort, →ISBN, page 187
“Those trees look like zombies playing a game of twister,” Paige said[…]
2008, Markus Naerheim, The City, Lulu.com (publisher), →ISBN, pages 309–310
The men rolled out a twister mat and invited the women into the game.
2009, Albert J. Bernstein, Am I The Only Sane One Working Here?, McGraw Hill Professional, →ISBN, page 138
In real life, it’s more like a game of twister, with your left foot in anger, your right elbow in guilt, and your butt hovering over fear.
2009, Dee Kelly, A Good Man's Sin, AuthorHouse, →ISBN, page 156
[…]he enjoyed outlasting all those in the game of twister.