I don't completely understand this question. do you mean how many dwarfs does Cinderealla have? If so, she was 7 dwarfs.
There are no elves in "Cinderella". There are seven dwarfs, however, in "Snow White". Their names are Doc, Happy, Sleepy, Sneezy, Grumpy, Bashful, and Dopey.
There are 3 books in the Chinese Cinderella Series. 1st book- Chinese Cinderella 2nd book- Chinese Cinderella: The Secret Dragon Society. 3rd book- Chinese Cinderella: The Mystery of the Song Dynasty Painting. Hope this helped you.
No. The story is an old, old folktale found in many variations in many cultures. There was no real Cinderella.
There are Cinderella stories from many cultures. The one most Americans are familiar with comes from a French fairytale credited to Charles Perrault.
10000000000-00000000000o00000000
There are no elves in "Cinderella". There are seven dwarfs, however, in "Snow White". Their names are Doc, Happy, Sleepy, Sneezy, Grumpy, Bashful, and Dopey.
There is one syllable in the word 'elves'.
there are no elves in Peter Pan
The Elves of Alfheim has 96 pages.
Elves are small, so Santa has many elves. They are also good workers, with lots of holiday cheer, who like to make children happy on Christmas.
If you mean elves as in Santa's elves then there are to many to find out the names of ALL of them.
1
The climax of the story The Elves and The Shoemaker is when the Shoemaker catches the elves. He had wondered for many nights who was helping him fix the shoes and was shocked to find out elves where his mystery helpers.
The plural possessive form of "elf" is "elves'." In this case, the apostrophe comes after the plural form "elves" to indicate possession. This construction is used when showing that something belongs to multiple elves.
Wood elves, high elves, dark elves, light elves.
There are 3 books in the Chinese Cinderella Series. 1st book- Chinese Cinderella 2nd book- Chinese Cinderella: The Secret Dragon Society. 3rd book- Chinese Cinderella: The Mystery of the Song Dynasty Painting. Hope this helped you.
In many mythologies and folklore, elves are actually depicted as tall, slender and graceful beings, not tiny. The idea of tiny elves may have been popularized in more recent fantasy literature and media, where elves are sometimes portrayed as diminutive magical creatures for storytelling purposes.