Answer:
Read explanation
Explanation:
To express the time after the hour (but before half past the hour), use y (and) and the number of minutes. Son las dos y cinco. (It is 2:05.) If you want to express the time after half past the hour, use menos (less) + the number of the following hour to express the time before the next hour (after half past the hour).
Answer:
1.<u>comprendo</u>
2.<u>responden </u>
3. <u>corrí</u>
4.<u>leí</u>
5.<u> lees</u>
6. <u>leo</u>
7.<u>corremos</u>
8.<u>comemos</u>
9.<u>bebemos</u>
10<u>.comprendias</u>
<u></u>
Lucas: ¡Buena idea! Pero, desafortunadamente (unfortunately) tú y yo necesitamos la clase de matemáticas para graduar. Ayer yo pienso que tú no 10____________(comprender) nada tampoco (either). Pero mañana es un nuevo día y ¡nosotros vamos a sacar una A en la clase de matemáticas!
this is preterit verbs
Explanation:
Answer:tienen
Explanation: Tienes would be used as, Tu tienes/You have. Tiene would be used as El/Ella Tienes/she/he has. Ellos/Ellas/Ustedes Tienen/They Have.
Answer:
Ellos / ellas / ustedes = traerían
Tú = Mirarías
Yo / él / ella /usted = comería
Nosotros = iríamos
Explanation:
Ellos (they-masculine) / ellas (they-femenine) / ustedes (you-plural): is used for two or more people, the ending "ían" is always for two or more people.
Tú (you): you, a single person, "ías" is always for the person you are talking to.
Yo (I) // él (he - him) // ella (she - her) // usted (you-politely): all of them are used with the ending "ía". "Usted" is used if you talk to an older person, and you finish verbs as if you where talking to them in third person.
Nosotros (we-us): always ending with "íamos"