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  2. A mean and hungry troll lives under a bridge. He's hungry for a meal and would love to snatch and eat any goat attempting to cross his bridge. How can the three goats get across safely?

  3. Then the troll jumps up. The big billy goat Gruff knocks him off the bridge with his horns. The troll falls into the stream and is carried away by the current and drowns. From then on, the bridge is safe and all three goats are able to go to the rich fields around the summer farm in the hills.

  4. The word "troll," like its concept, came into the English-speaking world in 1859 with a translation of Norwegian oral tradition. This included the story of "Three Billy Goats Gruff, which featured a troll under a bridge, introducing that motif into the popular English-speaking lexicon.

  5. But under the bridge lived a terrifically terrifying terrible troll called Trevor – he was always hungry too. And there was nothing he liked better than to eat a nice juicy billy-goat. The Little Billy-Goat was the first to reach the bridge.

  6. Sep 28, 2015 · Three Billy Goats Gruff try to cross a bridge - and outwit a Troll who wants to eat them! Read fairy tales and free bedtime stories for kids at Storyberries.

  7. Once upon a time there were three billy goats, who were to go up to the hillside to make themselves fat, and the name of all three was "Gruff." On the way up was a bridge over a cascading stream they had to cross; and under the bridge lived a great ugly troll , with eyes as big as saucers, and a nose as long as a poker.

  8. A troll discovered a bridge crossing a deep river. On one side of the river, the hills were green and thriving. On the other side, the land was barren and brown.

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