The right answer is Schwann cells.
<span>Schwann cells, or neurolemmocytes, are peripheral glial cells. With oligodendrocytes, they make myelin sheaths around the axons of neurons, protecting them and increasing the speed of electric nerve impulses.</span>
<span>Connective tissue supports the framework of the liver, and epithelial tissue protects the liver.
Connective tissue holds the liver in place during movement, and epithelial tissue forms the lining of the liver.
Connective tissues are mainly used in forming support networks within tissues and Epithelial tissue tend to line the organs and form protective cell layers.</span>
The appropriate response is cilia. Cilia are little hair-like structures on the surface of the cell. The hairs clear hair, bodily fluid, caught tidy and microscopic organisms up to the back of the throat where it can be gulped.
Cilia are found in the coating of the trachea (windpipe), where they clear bodily fluid and earth out of the lungs. In female well evolved creatures, the beating of cilia in the Fallopian tubes moves the ovum from the ovary to the uterus.