<span>The correct answer is A. This statement shows that they have acknowledged the fight, but is also referring to it in past tense by saying "have quarreled." He also refers to the strip of forest as "stupid," despite spending most of his life trying to maintain ownership of it.</span>
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
D. The speaker, having experienced adversity, regards hope in a positive light, as it
never asked anything of him/her
Explanation:
This question refers to Emily Dickinson's poem "Hope Is The Thing With Feathers".
In the poem, the author uses metaphor, or, more precisely, extended metaphor to compare hope to a bird. Sweet singing of the bird can be heard even in the biggest storms which suggests that hope is always there, even in the hardest periods in life.
The last stanza tells us that the bird can be seen everywhere (the chilliest land and the strangest see) but it (the bird) never asks for anything of us, not a single crumb.
That means that it's not an effort to hope for something, it doesn't cost us anything, it doesn't make us a problem. One should always hope and the bird will forever sing to us, not asking for anything in return.
 
        
             
        
        
        
The answer is D. Connotation
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Strictly speaking, the One Ring does not make the wearer invisible. ... When others wear it, they become 'invisible' to those around them, because they have become visible to Sauron, in a way. If he is looking in that direction, then he would see them. Hence why Gollum got away with it for so long, and Bilbo and Frodo. hope 
it helps.