Final answer:
In ASL, the phrase 'do you live in a house or an apartment?' is signed using 4. contrastive structure, where body and eye movements are used to compare two different options.
Step-by-step explanation:
To sign the phrase 'do you live in a house or an apartment?' in American Sign Language (ASL), the correct statement would be that you will use contrastive structure. Contrastive structure in ASL involves using your body, head, and eye gaze to compare two things which in this case are a house and an apartment. You would not necessarily furrow your eyebrows the entire time as eyebrow movement in ASL is generally used to indicate the type of question (yes/no versus wh-question) or to add grammatical context such as doubt or surprise.
The sign for 'do' is typically not used at the end of questions in ASL as it is understood in the context of the question, and indexing to sign 'and' is not applicable here because the question is asking to choose between two options, not joining them with 'and'.