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Tomtit [17]
3 years ago
5

Fill in the blank with the Spanish word that best completes the following sentence. Hay muchos animales en el _________. correo

zoológico cine banco
Spanish
2 answers:
aleksley [76]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

The correct word is:

La palabra correcta es:

zoológico

Explanation:

"Hay muchos animales en el<em> zoologico</em>"

There are many animals in the zoo

Anuta_ua [19.1K]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

Zoológico

Explanation:

It means there are a lot of animals in the zoo.

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How many cents are in a dime, a nickel and two pennies. 1.dieciséis 2.dieciocho 3.quince 4.diecisiete
devlian [24]

Answer:

The answer is 4.diecisiete

Explanation:

A dime,a nickel and a two pennies add up to 17 cents and in Spanish it's diecisiete.

I hope this helps in any way.

5 0
4 years ago
PLACE THESE VERBS IN THE RIGHT SENTENCES: asistir, comer, compartir, correr, escribir, venir: En casa todos estamos muy bien. Di
e-lub [12.9K]

This is the complete paragraph using the correct verbs conjugated in the simple present tense and the preterite tense:

En casa todos estamos muy bien. Diego ya (1) <u>comió</u> bien y (2) <u>compartió</u> todo con su gemelo, Bernardo. Mamá y Alejandra (3) <u>corren</u> todas las mañanas en el parque y yo (4) <u>asisto</u> a mis clases todos los días. Y tú, ¿cómo estás? ¿Cuándo (5) <u>vienes</u>? ¿Por qué no (6) <u>escribes</u>? Tu hija, Marcela.

<h3>When do you use the simple present tense and the preterite tense?</h3>

On one hand, you use the Spanish simple present tense (''presente del indicativo'' in Spanish) when you want to talk about habitual situations, routines, universal truths and facts.

On the other hand, you use the Spanish preterite tense ("pretérito perfecto simple" in Spanish) when you want to talk about actions completed at some point in the past.

Check more information about the simple present tense brainly.com/question/25856028

#SPJ1

6 0
2 years ago
Which is a vegetable that is commonly eaten baked or fried? las zanahorias las papas los frijoles el coco
sergiy2304 [10]

the answer is las papas which is a potato which can be fried and baked


4 0
4 years ago
Thanks for doing that !!!
dedylja [7]
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4 0
3 years ago
Vocabulary Table
marissa [1.9K]

Answer:

Imagine that you're in a store browsing through merchandise and talking to a salesperson behind the counter. As you discuss the various products, you will likely use words like, "this," "that," "these," and "those."

I'd like to try on this ring.

How much does that book cost?

What are these toys made out of?

I want to buy three of those light bulbs.

The underlined words above are known as demonstrative adjectives. Which adjective you use depends on two things: 1) how many objects there are, and 2) how close they are to you. Using this information we can build a grid:

singular:

plural:

near:

this

these

far:

that

those

Este, Estos, Ese, Esos

"Este es el camino."

Spanish is similar, albeit with one major difference that we'll get to later.

singular:

plural:

near:

este

estos

far:

ese

esos

Some examples:

Quisiera probarme este anillo.

I'd like to try on this ring.

¿Cuánto cuesta ese libro?

How much does that book cost?

¿De qué son estos juguetes?

What are these toys made out of?

Quiero comprar tres de esos bombillos.

I want to buy three of those light bulbs.

Please note that even though they are adjectives, we place este, ese, estos, and esos in front of the nouns they modify instead behind them like we normally do.

Also note that the demonstrative adjectives for singular items are este and ese, not esto and eso. That may seem inconsistent with what you already know about adjectives, but that's just the way it is.

There is a little rhyme that can help you keep your demonstrative adjectives straight: "This" and "these" have t's, "that" and "those" don't.

Explanation:

5 0
2 years ago
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