Answer:
Explanation:
13. Seven Minus Two is
14. Ten and Ten is
15. Thirty-three and seven is
16. Twenty-three and seven is
17. Fifteen and two are
18. Thirty-seven minus fifteen is
19. Fifteen and four are
20. Ten and one is
Answer:
this means What do we unite in Spanish to produce words? I hope this helped
The affirmative usted, generally, takes the Yo- indicative form of a verb, and uses the opposite ending of what would be normal for that verb. (for er/ir verbs, the usted command will end in "a", for ar verbs, the usted command will end in "e"). This form is very similar, and usually identical, to the present subjunctive.
Our verb is comer:
Since Comer is a regular verb, the yo form is like any indicative form, "com"
We add the opposite of the typical ending, which means we use "a"
Affirmative Usted Command:
Coma
Example:
"Coma esa mansana, para que no tenga que ir al doctor"