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make a word that means \to put your arms around someone or something.\ …

Question

make a word that means \to put your arms around someone or something.\ image shows two boxes: left box with dis (yellow), em (gray); right box with trust (gray), guard (yellow), brace (gray)

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

To form a word meaning "to put your arms around someone or something", we combine the prefix "em-" (from the left card, as "dis-" would not fit the meaning) with the root "brace" (from the right card? Wait, no, wait: Wait, the right card has "trust", "guard", "brace"? Wait, no, the correct root for "to put arms around" is "brace"? Wait, no, "embrace" is the word. So we take the prefix "em-" (from the left card, the options are "dis", "em") and the root "brace"? Wait, no, the right card's options: "trust", "guard", "brace"? Wait, no, maybe I misread. Wait, the left card has "dis", "em" (wait, the left card: top is blank, middle is "dis" (yellow), bottom is "em". The right card: top is "trust", middle is "guard" (yellow), bottom is "brace". Wait, no, to make "embrace", we need "em-" (prefix) and "brace"? Wait, no, "embrace" is "em-" + "brace"? Wait, "embrace" means to put arms around. So we take the prefix "em" (from the left card, the bottom one) and the root "brace" (from the right card, the bottom one). Wait, but the yellow boxes are "dis" and "guard"—maybe that's a distractor. Wait, the correct combination is "em" (prefix) + "brace" (root) to make "embrace", which means to put your arms around someone or something.

Answer:

em + brace = embrace