<em>To be sure, for sure</em>,<em> wow,</em> and <em>bike</em> are modern slang. The rest of them would be older. Credit to the person who commented that.
<u>Explanation</u>:
After proper addressing (both Milo's and the recipient) at the top of the document and the Date. The main body of the letter could read below;
Dear Sir/Ma,
APPLICATION FOR THE POSITION OF STUDENT ACTIVITY COORDINATOR
I am very much excited to apply to your job opening for the Student Activity Coordinator role under the Office of Student Affairs for the University. Having acquired over two years of experience coordinating student on-campus events, volunteering on several student community projects, and receiving several academic awards during my time in University, I feel I'm the ideal candidate for the job.
I am passionate about working with a diversely talented group of youngsters and adults in the university community. I have a very friendly disposition towards those I have the chance to work with in the past and present. With my communication skills, as well as my professional experience working with persons with disabilities, I feel the job role rightly fits my ideal work environment.
I hope you will grant me the opportunity to fill this role, and I look forward to hearing from you soon.
Sincerely,
Milo
A prepositional phrase, as the name itself suggests, has to do with prepositions. So it is a phrase which starts with a preposition, and includes one, or more words after it.
In this case, the prepositional phrase is of dried meat, vegetables, and flour. The phrase acts as an adjective - what kind of supplies? (Those) of dried meat...
Answer:
B) to stand stiffly
Explanation:
The best meaning for the word "bristle" as used in the passage is TO STAND STIFFLY because from the narration given, not long after the dog had seen him, he stood stiffly and began to growl.
The word "bristle" as a noun means a short hair on the skin of an animal, however the meaning of the word as a noun is to "stand stiffly" which was what the dog did because it was an action, not a noun.
C
C because horseplay is when children play really wild.