Answer:
Roosevelt's Inaugural Address had begun the process of restoring hope, but not everyone caught the new mood right away. The press coverage that morning largely downplayed or ignored FDR's line: “the only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” The New York Times and most other newspapers relegated the line to their inside pages, while focusing instead on the vivid wartime allusions he employed five times during his speech — martial metaphors that suggested that there was, in fact, plenty to fear after all. The greatest applause from the large crowd on the east side of the Capitol came when Roosevelt said that if his rescue program was not quickly approved: “I shall ask Congress for the one remaining instrument to meet the crisis: broad executive power to wage war against the emergency, as great as the power that would be given to me if we were in fact invaded by a foreign foe.”
Explanation:
Answer:
-The Great Gatsby is one of the top contenders for the elusive title of 'Great American Novel'
-The Great Gatsby is, for all its lucidity and its light page-count, a difficult book.
-The Great Gatsby is a patient, elegiac type of meditation that will suddenly wheel you around and send you flying.
Homonyms refer to the word which is pronounced and spelled similar with the other word(s) but is different in meaning.
As in the above options, a choice which is a pair of homonyms is b. Blue, blew
Here, Blue refers to the color whereas, blew is the past of blow, which refers to an act of motion of the wind or air.
Answer:
Yes it is the lady, or the tiger, by frank r stockon. I don't know what you're question is.