If the problem is identifying chemically equivalent hydrogens, then the following can be a useful alternate. For hydrogens that you suspect to be equivalent, replace them with another atom, e.g., Cl or F. If the name remains the same, the hydrogens are equivalent. If the name is different, then the hydrogens are not chemically equivalent. If you replace the hydrogens of the CH3-group of ethanol with a fluorine, you will get 2-fluoroethanol for all replacements. Therefore, the hydrogens are all equivalent.
For #16, replacing just one of the methyl hydrogens with a fluorine would give,
1-fluoro-3-ethoxypentane
1-fluoro-3-ethoxypentane
3-(2-fluoroethoxy)pentane
Therefore, two of the three methyl group hydrogen atoms are equivalent and ethoxy one is not.
For #20, the CH with the Br attached is a chirality center. Therefore, replacing the hydrogens of the CH2Cl group gives another chirality center, so the hydrogens are diastereogenic and are not chemically equivalent. One is (1S) and the other (1R). I have used the same naming strategy and arbitrarily started with only one of the possibilities for the bromine. There would be an additional pair of mirror images.