how does president reagan distinguish his position as leader of the united states from positions that may be…

how does president reagan distinguish his position as leader of the united states from positions that may be held by the leaders of the soviet union?\nthrough a contrast between american people and russian people, making clear that the people of the soviet union have not suffered as much as the american people\nby the use of proper nouns such as \normandy,\ \france,\ and \europe\\nby the use of the pronouns \i,\ \we,\ and \us\ to refer to the united states, and the pronoun \they\ to refer to the soviet union\nthrough a description of the problem of tyranny and various solutions

how does president reagan distinguish his position as leader of the united states from positions that may be held by the leaders of the soviet union?\nthrough a contrast between american people and russian people, making clear that the people of the soviet union have not suffered as much as the american people\nby the use of proper nouns such as \normandy,\ \france,\ and \europe\\nby the use of the pronouns \i,\ \we,\ and \us\ to refer to the united states, and the pronoun \they\ to refer to the soviet union\nthrough a description of the problem of tyranny and various solutions

Answer

Brief Explanations:

To determine how Reagan distinguished his position, we analyze each option:

  • Option 1: Contrasting American and Russian people's suffering isn't about distinguishing US vs Soviet leadership positions.
  • Option 2: Using proper nouns like "Normandy" etc. doesn't relate to distinguishing US and Soviet leadership.
  • Option 3: Using "I", "we", "us" for the US and "they" for the Soviet Union creates a clear linguistic distinction between the two leadership positions (US as "us" and Soviet as "they").
  • Option 4: Describing tyranny and solutions is about the problem, not distinguishing leadership positions.

So the correct option is the one with pronoun usage to refer to US (I, we, us) and Soviet Union (they).

Answer: The option "by the use of the pronouns 'I', 'we', and 'us' to refer to the United States, and the pronoun 'they' to refer to the Soviet Union" (the third option in the list).