I believe 1 is hacer i dont know # 2 tho but im guessing its (a) personally
Sophie necesita agua porque tiene sed.
For this case we can translate the sentence given as:
My dad______________ at school.
We must fill in the blank with the proper conjugation of the verb to be.
In indicative of the present tense we have:
My dad is at school.
In indicative of the imperfect preterite time we have:
My dad was at school.
In indicative of the future tense we have:
My dad will be at school.
ANswer:
Mi papá esta en la escuela.
Mi papá estaba en la escuela.
Mi papá estará en la escuela.
Answer:
whats under the ground floor in english but what do you want the answer to be
Explanation:
Answer:
The first thing you notice if you come from a Western European background is that the alphabet is different. It's based on Greek with a couple of Syrian letters thrown in. Some of the pronunciation is different too. But those two things can usually be overcome to satisfaction. Russian grammar can be picked up in a school year if it is taught systematically. The real challenge is vocabulary. Since Russian is one of the most distant Indo-European languages from English, there are few cognates. I.e., you don't get many clues as to what a word means like you do with German or Spanish. For example, the German word for "hand" is "Hand". The Spanish word for "hand" is "mano", from which we get, through Latin, manual, manipulate, etc. The Russian word for "hand" is "ruka". Doesn't sound familiar, does it? And the standard greeting, "Zdrastvuytye" doesn't sound like anything from this world. So what you do is find a frequency dictionary and make recordings of English -> Russian (nouns declined, verbs conjugated). That way you can anchor the Russian sounds to your English. Just listen to it over and over again and it will write itself on your subconscious. That is what is necessary for you to recognize words quickly in conversation. Hope that helps.
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