Please write the poem in a paragraph. You can start ....'When we think about green men, we think about aliens. They are believed to be green in color
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e trope may actually predate science fiction itself, hearkening back to a 12th-century English legend known as "The Green Children of Woolpit," said Arthur Evans, managing editor of the journal Science Fiction Studies (SFS) at DePauw University in Indiana.
In a 2006 study published in SFS, scientists described this folktale, which recounts the unexplained appearance of two children with green skin near the village of Woolpit in eastern England, Evans told Live Science in an email.
In science fiction, use of the phrase "little green men" dates back to the 1940s, with the Encyclopedia of Science Fiction tracing the first usage to the story "Mayaya's Little Green Men" (Weird Tales, 1946) by Harold Lawlor.
Frederic Brown's popular science-fiction novel, "Martians, Go Home" (E.P. Dutton, 1955) reinforced the idea of small, green-skinned alien invaders that are more irritating than dangerous. Rather than engaging Earth's armies in deadly battles for global domination, Brown's little green men preferred to spend their time playing annoying and embarrassing pranks.
Related: 7 huge misconceptions about aliens
In the Hanna-Barbera cartoon "The Flintstones," a small, green alien troublemaker, the Great Gazoo, first appeared in 1965.
In the Hanna-Barbera cartoon "The Flintstones," a small, green alien troublemaker, the Great Gazoo, first appeared in 1965. (Image credit: Copyright, Hanna-Barbera / Charlton Comics)
Little green men also appeared on television, with the Great Gazoo character debuting on the cartoon "The Flintstones" in 1965. The term surfaced in the scripts of science-fiction programs like "Star Trek," in the 1969 episode "Tomorrow Is Yesterday," and in the 1988 "Doctor Who" episode "Remembrance of the Daleks." And fans of the "Toy Story" films are likely very familiar with the "little green men" alien toys, which were re