10. c; translates to "you know how to play very well" others translate as:
a-you know how to play / b- he/she can play very well /d-you can go play well
11. d; translates to "want to go to the beach with me?" others trnslate as:
a-can you go to the beach? / b-you i can go to the beach? /c- can you go with yourself to the beach?
12. a; translates to "im going to dance at the party tonight" others translate as:
b- im going to dance at the party this night / c-youre at the party of dance tonight / d-tonight i dance at the party
Which of the following adjectives means the opposite of difícil?
C. Fácil
Answer:
the only differences are the "ser" and "estar"
Explanation:
I think Ser is more of a simple way to describe what happens, while Estar is more like describing how something happens.
For Ser: description, occupation, characteristics, time, origin, relationship
For Estar: Position, Location, Action, Condition, Emotion
(I don't have Spanish class, this is all from google :> obviously)
It is the same as english the only difference is that inspead of a R in the end it will be an L... It will be "papel"
Hope this helps