<em>Somos Juan Y Rufino. Nuestros equipos practican los martes y los jueves.</em>
<em>Answer: (1) Ustedes</em><em> son Juan y Rufino. </em>
Translation: We are Juan Y Rufino. Our teams practice on Tuesdays and Thursdays. (1) You are Juan and Rufino.
<em>Un grupo de estudiantes de Costa Rica mira la tele en su casa en Miami. </em>
<em>Answer: (4) Ellos</em><em> son un grupo de estudiantes. </em>
Translation: A group of Costa Rican students watch TV at their home in Miami. (4) They are a group of students.
<em>Tus padres y tú viven en una casa en Tegucigalpa. </em>
<em>Answer: (1) Ustedes</em><em> viven en una casa en Tegucigalpa. </em>
Translation: (1) You and your parents live in a house in Tegucigalpa.
<em>Answer: (1) You</em><em> live in a house in Tegucigalpa. </em>
<em>Soy Lidia. Ayudo a su madre y a su tío en la cocina. </em>
<em>Answer: (3) Yo</em><em> soy Lidia.</em>
Translation: (3) I am Lidia. I help her mother and uncle in the kitchen.
<h2><em>Spymore</em></h2>
Answer:
El mes pasado fui con mis amigos de campamento. Llevamos una carpa y dormimos cuatro noches seguidas allí. Luego, el quinto día, descubrí un animal peligroso suelto. Nos fuimos inmediatamente. A pesar de ese inconveniente, nos divertimos mucho.
Explanation:
I wrote an example of a text describing a past trip and using only the preterite tense. The <u>Spanish preterite tense</u> ("pretérito perfecto simple" in Spanish) is used to talk about actions completed at some point in the past.
"Fui" and "nos fuimos" are the preterite form of the irregular verb "ir" and "llevamos", "dormimos", "descubrí" and "divertimos" are regular preterite verbs. I also used the phrases "el mes pasado" and "luego".
Answer:
The characters like ñ or é (there are alot more)
Explanation:
They have different characters to emphasize the pronunciation of the word.
I hope this helps!!!
Who is Ana? ¿Quién es Anna?