I believe the answer is C because the word is not specific
Answer:
For structural patterns I have noticed that ASL does not communicate every single word in asentence to make the sentence understandable whereas spoken English does. In ASL Presenttense: Signing in present tense is pretty simple — you sign close to your body, just like younormally do in a signed conversation. In ASL Past tense: Signing in past tense is just a bittrickier. To place everything you sign into past tense, you sign finish at chest level either at thebeginning or end of the sentence while saying the word “fish,” a shortened version of “finish.”This signals that everything has already happened. Although it doesn’t matter whether you signthe word finish at the beginning or end of the sentence, most Signers place it at the beginning.
Explanation:
1. His l. jovial (cheerful and friendly) nature made him fun to be with.
2. For Halloween any f. stygian (very dark, gloomy. somber, hellish, infernal) costume is acceptable.
3. The new boy in school was an a. adonis (an extremely handsome young man).
4. The punishment for arriving home late seemed e. draconian (excessively harsh and severe) to the teenager.
5. Susie was always my n. Nemesis (an opponent who cannot be defeated) - she always beat me by a little bit in things academic and athletic.
6. A former teacher Mr. Smith has been my trusted h. mentor (an experienced adviser).
7. The c. auroral (Aurora was the goddess of dawn in Roman mythology) glow of dawn is much softer than the glow of sunset.
8. An k. elysian (heavenly) vacation for me would be an unscheduled month of traveling through Italy.
9. When you accompany me to state competition, you are under my b. aegis (protection).
10. He is so smart that I can never follow the twists and turns of his g. protean (able to do many different things; versatile; multitalented) mind.