It is something called puberty smart one!!hahahahaha
He said to her that the best people in the world are always mad.
Alice's parents are never mentioned in either of Lewis Carroll's Alice books. We know that she has a sister and a brother, but other than that, we are left in the dark as to her relationship with her family. However, she is never described as an orphan, and as Alice Liddell, the little girl on whom Alice was originally based, has both parents, we can probably assume that Alice's parents are at home, in the real world.
well what is suggested is that in Alice's world anything would be nonsense. so the rabbit wearing clothes and being able to talk suggest that wonderland is Alice's magical world of nonsense were everything in our world that isn't possible like rabbits talking, would be real in her world-in other words what is impossible in our world isn't in her world it is possible in hers.
The Alice in Wonderland stories include many undertones, including criticsm of English society and politics from the time the book was written. The author mocks the attitude of the upper class using characters from Wonderland.
NoSteamboat Willie starring Mickey Mouse was the first short film by Disney(1928)Snow White and the 7 Dwarfs was the first full length Disney Movie(1937)
Alice is a human being. Most of the other characters are fantasy types.
The hookah smoking caterpillar was described as being three inches tall, according to Lewis Carroll's "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland."
buddhu
No, the Mad Hatter is a human being.
He said to her that the best people in the world are always mad.
A prefix for "mature" could be "im" to form "immature," meaning not fully developed or mature. A suffix for "mature" could be "ity" to form "maturity," referring to the state of being fully developed or mature.
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland has been in print for a long time (first published in 1865!) and is often referenced in popular culture. Its themes are timeless and it's amusing with being moralistic.
The Oraculum - which is described as being "a Calendrical Compendium of Underland"
That would probably be the White Rabbit in Alice in Wonderland.
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland has been in print for a long time (first published in 1865!) and is often referenced in popular culture. Its themes are timeless and it's amusing with being moralistic.
In "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland," the white rabbit's watch is famously slow, causing him to worry about being late. The watch is believed to be an exaggeration of the slower pace of time in the whimsical world of Wonderland, contributing to the overall theme of time and its perception in the story.
The Production Budget for Alice in Wonderland was $200,000,000.