It's the things the kids say that crack me up. Especially when they're small.
When Sarah was 2 years old, she said to me, "When you're dead, can I have your shoes?"
I asked her what she wanted for her birthday when she was little, & after some thought, she said she'd have one of those stripy things like her dad has. I asked what stripy her what she meant, & she said, "You know, you can see it when he's in the bath - like an elephant's trunk near his legs." (Sripey?

) I said, "What do you want one of them for?", & she said she just liked the look of 'em.
Again when she was tiny, her dad arrived home in a grump, and the 1st thing he said to her was, "Pick all these toys up, right now". She stood up & put her hands on her hips, and said, "No I willn't, and you're not in charge. Me & my mum are".
Then another time, she had her pet lip out when I asked her to take something to her dad in the garden. I asked what was up, & she said she didn't want to speak to him, 'cause he was being unkind to her. I asked why, & she explained she'd just been ballet dancing & had accidentally kicked him in the tentacles.
She couldn't pronounce 'th' for ages, so I used to deliberately ask her what she'd been doing, knowing she'd answer, "Yis & yat."
When Alex was tiny, we were walking through town, when I bumped into a woman who'd previously been a work colleague, Jane, who happens to be a dwarf. We stood having a chat for a bit, and she kept saying how cute Al was, and trying to stroke his face, but he kept dodging round my legs, out of her reach. Just as we were heading our separate ways, he demanded in a booming, angry voice, "Why didn't you stop that elf trying to touch me? You
know they're dangerous!" .
When he first started school, he asked if he could invite 2 new friends home for their tea. I asked their names, and he said they were Fraggle and Asda. I was a bit disappointed on meeting them to learn that they were really called Bradley & Esther.