<Li> In one nineteenth century variant, the gifts come from "my mother" rather than "my true love". </Li> <Li> Some variants have "juniper tree" or "June apple tree" rather than "pear tree", presumably a mishearing of "partridge in a pear tree . </Li> <Li> The 1780 version has "four colly birds"--colly being a regional English expression for "black" (the name of the collie dog breed may come from this word). This wording must have been opaque to many even in the 19th century: "canary birds", "colour'd birds", "curley birds", and "corley birds" are found in its place . Frederic Austin's 1909 version, which introduced the now - standard melody, also altered the fourth day's gift to four "calling" birds, and this variant has become the most popular, although "colly" is still found . </Li> <Li> The "five gold rings" may become "five golden rings", especially in North America . In the standard melody, this change enables singers to fit one syllable per musical note . </Li>

In the song 12 days of christmas how many gifts