Answer:
First page:
Adverb = bolded, the word it modifies = <em>italics</em>
- we have <em>heard </em>the story before (the adverb answers the question <u>when)</u>
- the surgeon carefully <em>stitched</em> the wound (the adverb answers the question <u>in what manner</u>)
- last week, we kindly paid my grandfather a <em>visit </em>(the adverb answers the question <u>when</u>)
- Mindy <em>felt</em> under the table (the adverb answers the question <u>where</u>)
- Thoroungly <em>bake</em> the chicken (the adverbs answers the question <u>in what manner</u>)
Second page:
Adverb and adjectives = bolded
- The lenghty article was published today.
- A company was illegally dumping filthy waste.
- State officials were completely unaware.
- Company employees denied any wrongdoing.
- That class was difficult but useful.
- A warm wind blew down the valley.
- Can a young pitcher succeed in the big leagues?
- Ms. Jones put her plate on the kitchen sink.
The excerpt as a whole communicates a wide array of words president Roosevelt eloquently employs; however, it is <em>the content of the executive order itself </em>which best describes his use of vocabulary.
President Roosevelt is able to command the furnishing of a myriad of resources from various domains of interest including: <em>"medical aid, hospitalization, food, clothing, transportation, use of land and shelter</em>". After referrering to other supplies, he is also able to point out categories without an overlap, e.g. <em>"equipment, utilities, facilities and services"</em>.
In a Shakespearean Sonnet the two last lines are always Rhyming Couplets.
Discuss the theme of loyalty abd betrayal in the play "othello" would be the best choice to write an essay