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>.
I would say a and c only.
I hope this helps you, baiiii <3
C, because it's bias to say you think someone knows what's going to happen. Someone else could easily argue that they were just huddling against the cold; it's not factual. It's opinion.
17.) i think the subject is planets, and verb is fit
18.) i think the subject is fruit salad and verb is make
19.) subject is sun and verb is seen
20.) this one is a bit tricky
21.) subject is canyon or horses and verb is galloped
22.) subject is susan and verb is step
23.) subject is shortcut and verb is taken ..?
24.) this one is a lil tricky too
25.) subjects are spots on the sun and verb is appear and disappear
i hope these are right! i tried my best hahah