of course not!! lice eggs and lice live in the roots of your hair,, so i guess if you have a very hairy lunch box then maybe they could grow in there.
yes
Lice Eggs and Lice Nits are usually mistaken as Dandruff and Dandruff is usually mistaken as Lice Eggs and Lice Nits
yes you can if the lice lay eggs on an article of clothing and you put it on
Yes lice are real. They are a parasite that feed off of our blood and cement nits(eggs) to the shafts of our hair. They spread to other people and are a great nuisance because they are hard to kill.
Yes
I had lice when I was like 8 and I know quite a lot about them. I kinda found it interesting that bugs were living on my head. Anyway, yes they do bite they eat your scalp. that causes sores that itch. That why your head itches when you have lice.Another answer:Actually nits don't bite, lice do. Nits are the eggs, and some authors limit the definition to dead lice eggs. So the eggs are either hatched already or incapable of hatching. That makes things confusing when schools have "no nit" policies, and only nymphs and adult lice spread. Abandoned egg shells and dead eggs (often after using lice shampoo) cannot spread nor bite. However, there is no way of knowing by appearance whether the eggs are viable or not.
Body lice can be spread by close personal contact or shared bedding.
The right answer is no. Lice eggs are white. They eat your hair and make you scratch your head.
They lay eggs (more lice)
The mature, grown, lice will leave eggs or nits in the hair. those eggs will hatch and turn into mature, grown, lice. This process with keep repeating until you get all lice and lice eggs out of the hair!
No, cats cannot spread lice to humans. Lice are specific to humans and cannot survive on animals like cats.
Once children have lice in their hair, they will keep them until treated. The lice process is: adult lice transfer from one head to another, the female lice lay eggs, the eggs hatch within 7 days the baby lice grow, they lay eggs and the whole process repeats itself.