it must of had some made up potion that would make her grow taller. but it really isn't possible to actually have that seeing food doesn't make you grow.
In the book, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Alice eats a small cake marked 'eat me', a pebble which has turned into a cake and some pieces of mushroom, all of which cause her to change size. She also has some bread and butter while at the mad tea party, but this does not affect her.She drinks from two bottles which she finds, one of which is marked 'drink me'. These also affect her height.In Tim Burton's 2010 movie, she eats a small cake marked, 'Eat me', named 'Upelkuchen'. She then drinks from a bottle, marked 'Drink Me', which later on in the movie is called 'Pishalver.' by the twins and by the White Queen.
She drinks a potion that makes her small and eats cake to make her bigger and the mushrooms(two different ones) can make her do either.
In the book Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Alice doesn't eat any cookies (or 'biscuits' as the British call them.) She eats two cakes and part of a mushroom.In the 1951 Disney movie she eats what appears to be a cookie while she's in the White Rabbit's house, but this might also be a small cake; it isn't specified in the movie.
In his book, Alice's Adventures in wonderland, Lewis Carroll doesn't describe what the cake marked 'eat me' tastes like. By the time Alice eats it, she has already drunk from the bottle marked 'drink me', which had "a sort of mixed flavour of cherry- tart, custard, pine-apple, roast turkey, toffee, and hot buttered toast". She is expecting to change size as a result of eating the cake, and is seemingly too busy wondering whether she will shrink or grow to notice what it tastes like. She ate a little bit, and said anxiously to herself, `Which way? Which way?', holding her hand on the top of her head to feel which way it was growing, and she was quite surprised to find that she remained the same size: to be sure, this generally happens when one eats cake, but Alice had got so much into the way of expecting nothing but out-of-the-way things to happen, that it seemed quite dull and stupid for life to go on in the common way. The flavour of the cookie isn't described in Disney's 1951 movie, either.
In the book, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Alice...shrinks after drinking from a bottle marked 'DRINK ME' (Chapter 1)grows after eating a cake marked 'EAT ME' (Chapter 1)shrinks while fanning herself with the White Rabbit's fan (Chapter 2)grows after drinking from an unmarked bottle (Chapter 3)shrinks after eating a pebble which has turned into a cake (Chapter 3)shrinks after nibbling a piece of the right hand side of the mushroom (Chapter 5)grows after eating a piece of the left hand side of the mushroom (Chapter 5)brings herself back to her normal height by alternately nibbling the right hand piece and the left hand piece of the mushroom (Chapter 5)shrinks after nibbling the right hand piece of mushroom (Chapter 5)grows after nibbling the left hand piece pf mushroom (Chapter 6)shrinks after nibbling some mushroom (Chapter 7)grows during the trial of the Knave of Hearts (Chapters 11 & 12)The food Alice eats which causes her to change her size is a cake marked 'EAT ME', a pebble which has turned into a cake and the mushroom which the Caterpillar was sitting on.She also changes size after drinking from a bottle marked 'DRINK ME' and from an unmarked bottle.Fanning herself with the White Rabbit's fan also causes Alice to change size, and she changes entirely without reason during the trial.
In the book Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll Alice drinks a liquid which makes her very small. To grow taller she eats a cake.
In the book, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Alice eats a small cake marked 'eat me', a pebble which has turned into a cake and some pieces of mushroom, all of which cause her to change size. She also has some bread and butter while at the mad tea party, but this does not affect her.She drinks from two bottles which she finds, one of which is marked 'drink me'. These also affect her height.In Tim Burton's 2010 movie, she eats a small cake marked, 'Eat me', named 'Upelkuchen'. She then drinks from a bottle, marked 'Drink Me', which later on in the movie is called 'Pishalver.' by the twins and by the White Queen.
Virtually anyone and everyone eats some form of a cake.
If you mean a cake that eats people, the answer is no. If you mean a man that eats cake, the answer is yes.
A bottle of cordial makes Alice grow, a cake makes her shrink and a mushroom makes her grow or shrink depending on which side she eats from.
She drinks a potion that makes her small and eats cake to make her bigger and the mushrooms(two different ones) can make her do either.
In the book Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Alice doesn't eat any cookies (or 'biscuits' as the British call them.) She eats two cakes and part of a mushroom.In the 1951 Disney movie she eats what appears to be a cookie while she's in the White Rabbit's house, but this might also be a small cake; it isn't specified in the movie.
I don't know if it is, but it could be. The caterpillar Alice meets is smoking a Hookah and sitting on a mushroom; Alice eats a special cake and drinks a special drink that makes her shrink and grow (a high and a low); all the people she meets are crazy.
In his book, Alice's Adventures in wonderland, Lewis Carroll doesn't describe what the cake marked 'eat me' tastes like. By the time Alice eats it, she has already drunk from the bottle marked 'drink me', which had "a sort of mixed flavour of cherry- tart, custard, pine-apple, roast turkey, toffee, and hot buttered toast". She is expecting to change size as a result of eating the cake, and is seemingly too busy wondering whether she will shrink or grow to notice what it tastes like. She ate a little bit, and said anxiously to herself, `Which way? Which way?', holding her hand on the top of her head to feel which way it was growing, and she was quite surprised to find that she remained the same size: to be sure, this generally happens when one eats cake, but Alice had got so much into the way of expecting nothing but out-of-the-way things to happen, that it seemed quite dull and stupid for life to go on in the common way. The flavour of the cookie isn't described in Disney's 1951 movie, either.
when a zombie eats a cake
Ofcourse he did, everybody eats cake, I don't even like cake but I still eat it!
In the book, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Alice...shrinks after drinking from a bottle marked 'DRINK ME' (Chapter 1)grows after eating a cake marked 'EAT ME' (Chapter 1)shrinks while fanning herself with the White Rabbit's fan (Chapter 2)grows after drinking from an unmarked bottle (Chapter 3)shrinks after eating a pebble which has turned into a cake (Chapter 3)shrinks after nibbling a piece of the right hand side of the mushroom (Chapter 5)grows after eating a piece of the left hand side of the mushroom (Chapter 5)brings herself back to her normal height by alternately nibbling the right hand piece and the left hand piece of the mushroom (Chapter 5)shrinks after nibbling the right hand piece of mushroom (Chapter 5)grows after nibbling the left hand piece pf mushroom (Chapter 6)shrinks after nibbling some mushroom (Chapter 7)grows during the trial of the Knave of Hearts (Chapters 11 & 12)The food Alice eats which causes her to change her size is a cake marked 'EAT ME', a pebble which has turned into a cake and the mushroom which the Caterpillar was sitting on.She also changes size after drinking from a bottle marked 'DRINK ME' and from an unmarked bottle.Fanning herself with the White Rabbit's fan also causes Alice to change size, and she changes entirely without reason during the trial.