The main idea of the book Little Red Riding Hood is that the little girl went to give her grandmother cookies because her grandmother is sick in the bed.
But the big bad wolf wants those good smelling cookies but the little red riding hood denise to give him the cookies so he ran all the way to her grandmothers house and pretended to be her grandmother
Sure! Consider the story of "Little Red Riding Hood." Setting: A quaint village and the dark woods surrounding it. Characters: Little Red Riding Hood, her grandmother, the Big Bad Wolf, and the woodsman. Plot: Little Red Riding Hood sets off to deliver food to her grandmother, but the wolf tricks her and reaches the grandmother's house first. Conflict: The main conflict arises when the wolf threatens both Red Riding Hood and her grandmother. Resolution: A woodsman hears their cries, rescues them, and defeats the wolf, restoring safety to the village.
I think the conflict is that the wolf wants to eat Little Red Riding Hood.
The characters that appear really depend upon what version of the story you are reading, however I would say that there are three characters that appear in every story of this type. There is of course Little Red Riding Hood herself and although her name changes in different cultures as far as I know this character is always a little girl. The second universal character is the Grandmother, the mother is also almost always a part of the story although I would not consider her a main character. The mother never appears in the story, she is only mentioned. The last universally mentioned character is that of the wolf. Depending on the story this character isn't always a wolf, I can think of a few stories where the wolf is portrayed as a bear and even one story where the role of the wolf was played by a dragon.
The story is about a little girl with a red hood, named by everyone "Little Red Riding Hood," who learns that she must listen to her parents in order to be safe from danger (namely a big bad wolf).
A villain who will not back down is the kind of character of which the wicked witch and the big bad wolf are examples.Specifically, a villain is the main character's arch enemy. That villain intends and is committed to the main character's misery. The descriptions fit both the big bad wolf in "Little Red Riding Hood" and the Wicked Witch of the West in "The Wizard of Oz."
The Main Idea is to Follow your Dreams No Matter What Is In The Way...Example she got an invitation to the Ball so her mice friends help her make a dress so bascically she is doing what she disires even tho she a slave to her step-mother and step-sister
the bunny as known as maisies (little redd riding hoods) friend
I am no English major, but I have never seen Little Red Riding Hood ever indicated as anything but a fairy tale. A fable is typically short and brief with a moral to the story about human nature. Thus, I would think Little Red Riding Hood is a fairly tale and not a fable.
The main character of the story was Little Red Riding Hood. Don't let anyone defy your character and tear you down. You have a really good character and I don't believe you would harm anyone.
the main problem is that henrys dad, the big bad wolf is accused for murder against lil red riding hood and her grandmother
Oh boy what a question. First: That a wolf is a symbol of evil and will use deception to get what he wants, in the way he dresses up like the grandma. Second: That wolves prey on the innocent and should be destroyed, as the woodcutter does later on. Three: The wolf will do whatever it has to in order to get what it wants, even killing another aka eating the grandma Four: The wolf thinks of nothing but itself and how to get what it wants.
A stated main idea is when the writer of the particular piece clearly identifies what the main idea is. In contrast, an unstated main idea is when the writer references the main idea, but does not clearly name it.