Answer:
The Quest
Explanation:
<u>The Rebirth</u> – this is not the right answer. While The Lord of the Rings includes the rebirth of Gandalf in one moment, it’s not the main plot of the series.
<u> Voyage and Return</u> – this is not the correct answer. There is a narrative of the voyage in the story. Still, this is only as part of the quest, and the return is not the central part of the plot.
<u>Overcoming the Monster</u> – this is not the right answer. Slaying the monster is not the most important task of the fellowship, nor the most important plot point.
<u> The Quest – this is the right answer.</u> <u>The fellowship has a quest to fulfill. This quest is destroying the ring by throwing it into the Mordor. The other points in the plot (including the rebirth, voyage, and slaying the various monsters) are all just side plots to the main thing that is the point of the whole series, which is the quest.</u>
Directed panspermia is a speculative hypothesis about the origin of life on Earth. This hypothesis is a very specific sub-division of a broad group of related ideas. “Exogenesis” is a term referring to the general hypothesis that earth life originated somewhere other than Earth, such as another planet.
i know your mad but here are the answer s
“The same little featherhead!”, “That is like a woman!”, “What is this! Is my little squirrel out of temper?”
The are the three best options that show Torvald sometimes treats Nora like a child. Calling Nora a "little featherhead" and "little squirrel out of temper" gives her appearance of a person who is not very wise or intelligent. It makes her seem innocent and ignorant much like a child would be. When Torvald says, "That is like a woman!", it is not just a statement of fact. Torvald sees women as innocent, ignorant and helpless much like a child would be. The other two options do not fit because that do not show that Torvald thinks of Nora as a child.