nobody said that in The Hobbit. the book you're talking about is The Lorax, in which a small brown creature, the Lorax, indeed, speaks for the trees
Wargs. They are slightly larger and can speak.
He uses the term to infuriate the spiders and draw them away from the dwarves tied up in the trees.
A HOBBIT, of course!
There is no reference to swords in The Shire in The Hobbit. The only mention that could be attributed to the hobbits is a comment by Gandalf. He said that the swords in this region are all dull, and so he settled on finding a burglar to help the dwarves.
'The Hobbit' of course!
The Lorax from Dr. Suess
In the book the Hobbit they do speak.
They were able to dodge behind trees. The slide then went around the trees and they were safe.
The famous riddle asked by Gollum to Bilbo Baggins in "The Hobbit" involves a hobbit, a fish, and a mysterious riddle is: "What has roots as nobody sees, Is taller than trees, Up, up it goes, And yet never grows?"
read the book
read the book "the hobbit" and you will find out that Bilbo didn't mean to say it at all he almost said burglar but quickly changed it to hobbit so it came out burrahobbit
Only her father is shown in the trees in The Lord of the Rings.
Yup they're making the new one as we speak i think its coming out it 2011/2012
Wargs. They are slightly larger and can speak.
He uses the term to infuriate the spiders and draw them away from the dwarves tied up in the trees.
The wargs were unable to get them out. However, the goblins were able to redirect the fire and were in the process of burning them out.
Unlike the trolls in 'LOTR', the trolls in The Hobbit were used for comic relief. The Hobbit is, after all, a childen's story - Tolkien wrote it originally for his own kids, and the troll episode was their favourite part of the whole tale. The idea was trolls could speak a debased form of 'westron' (the 'common tongue'), so Tolkien represented that in English through a Cockney dialect, which in his opinion was probably 'common'. Hope that helps :)