never-never land



never-never land

A fantasy land, an imaginary place, as in I don't know what's gotten into Marge-she's way off in never-never land. This expression gained currency when James Barrie used it in Peter Pan (1904) for the place where Peter and the Lost Boys live. However, in the second half of the 1800s Australians already were using it for vast unsettled areas of their continent ( the outback), and there the term became popular through Mrs. Aeneas Gunn's We of the Never Never (1908). In Australia it still refers to northwest Queensland or northern Australia in general. Elsewhere it simply signifies a fantasy or daydream.
See also: land

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
IrmtrudEERM-trootGerman
Fiona[fi'əunə]
Micheline-French
Absolonab-so-LAWNFrench
JuanaHWAH-nahSpanish
Fathiyya-Arabic