<span>Yes as was mentioned twice, it is based on a poem by José Martí, a Cuban nationalist poet and independence hero.
In the original lyrics, the author referred to a "guajira guantanamera"
(a peasant girl from Guantánamo), but since the song itself is
structured as a guajira (the Cuban rhythm, named after Cuban peasants),
some people think that the chorus refers to the song itself (or, rather,
its rhythmic structure), and not to an individual person.
In other words, the words are interpreted as an introduction to a
"guajira, Guantánamo-style" (which is part of Cuba -- thus a Cuban
style).
The song became a popular use as romantic, patriotic, humorous, or
social commentary lyrics, in Cuba and in the other Spanish speaking
parts of the world. </span>
Hi , the answer is tiene.
The answer depends on the tense you are supposed to be using. If you're using present tense, it's "como." For the imperfect tense, it's "comía." For the preterit tense, it's "comí." For the future tense, it's "comeré." For the conditional tense, it's "<span>comería."</span>
Answer:
el la tienda la maestra compra limonada, y trae una bottella de medicina ella va y la prueba y la medicina no es buena, y la farmacia dice trae naranja es buena medicina y la senora dice pero vende limonada ?
Explanation: