bob disnic
Peter Pan lives in NeverLand with the Lost Boys with no female companionship ;) However, based on the most recent rendition, Hook, Peter Pan may have left Neverland and return in his late 40s for a brief period. He lives somewhere in the United States and is a practicing attorney. In his absence the Lost Boys lived with their leader Rufio.
jane is not an animal! Jane is the daughter of Wendy in the story! Unless your talking about when she's with the lost boys............................I don't know.
Before Wendy, John, and Michael came to Neverland, he lived with the Lost Boys and Tinker Bell in the house underground. After they all left for London, he and Tink lived in the little house the boys had built for Wendy, which they'd moved up to the treetops where the fairies live.
You could solve by repetitive subtraction, or division. 45/8 = 5, with remainder of 5.So 5 boys can each have 8 marbles, which is 40 marbles, and there will be 5 marbles remaining.
They are the lost boys in Neverland.
Neverland is a fictional place created by J.M. Barrie in the story of Peter Pan, so it does not have a real capital city. In the story, Peter Pan and the Lost Boys live in Neverland, a magical island where they have adventures with pirates and fairies.
The lived in the forest in never land with Peter Pan
Neverland is a fictional place written by J M Barrie. It is the dwelling place of Peter Pan, Tinker Bell and The Lost Boys. Finding Neverland was also a film made in 2004 about J M Barrie and who influenced him in writing his wonderful novels
By hitching a ride on Captain Hook's ship The Jolly Rogerwith Peter and the rest of the boys.
Wendy goes home and the lost boys find parents and peter pan goes back to neverland
The boys give Tom Sawyer small trinkets like marbles, a dead rat on a string, and a kite in return for the opportunity to whitewash the fence. Tom successfully convinces them that whitewashing the fence is a fun and desirable task, illustrating his clever and manipulative nature.
The boys played marbles in the schoolyard by drawing a circle in the dirt as their playing area. Each player would take turns trying to knock their opponent's marbles out of the circle using their own marble, which they would flick with their fingers. Players often had specific rules about which marbles could be played for and how many shots each player could take. The game combined skill and strategy, as players aimed to win as many marbles as possible while honing their shooting techniques.