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NEVER-NEVER LAND

NEVER-NEVER LAND
ScnMaster
an unreal, imaginary or ideal state, condition, place, etc. Class VIII №2, Approved November 1990
NEVER-NEVER LAND
ScnTUEU
an imaginary, unreal or ideal state, condition or place. The term also means any remote, uncharted or unsettled part of the world. It commonly refers to a place in the popular play Peter Pan, written in 1904 by Scottish playwright J.M. Barrie (1860--1937), which is the home of Peter Pan, the main character of the story. He is the hero from Never-Never Land, a place where children never grow up and where there are Indians, a wicked pirate named Captain Hook and Peter Pan's friends, including Tinker Bell (a small, flying fairy) and the Lost Boys (those who have been lost by their nurses and not claimed within seven days and thus end up in Never-Never Land where they do not age). In the story, Peter (who can fly) travels to London and becomes friends with three children Wendy, Michael and John. He then flies them to Never-Never Land, where they encounter various adventures. Now, you're in a never-never land that has never been explored.an unreal, imaginary or ideal state, condition, place, etc. They've gone into some other never-never land. - Study and Education (13 Aug. 64) n. an imaginary, unreal state, condition or place. The term also means any remote, uncharted or unsettled part of the world. It commonly refers to a place in the popular play Peter Pan (written in 1904 by Scottish playwright J.M. Barrie [1860-1937] and made popular by the animated Walt Disney movie of same name). It is the home of Peter Pan, the main character of the story, and is a place where children never grow up.an unreal, imaginary or ideal state, condition, place, etc.