Hola Ana, yo no te <u>llame</u> ayer porque no <u>tenia</u> mucho tiempo.
Answer:
This clown is called Bongo and entertains at children's parties. Today he has a birthday party for a two-year-old boy, so he needs to wear clothes of many colors. Today he wears pink hair, which matches the stripes on the sleeves of her dark blue jacket. On his chest he carries a white and yellow flower. He has three buttons on his jacket: one green, another orange and the last one is pink, just like his hair. In the waist it has two pockets and in them a button on each side. The button of one of the pockets is green and the other is pink. Wear a dark pink shorts with green polka dots of many sizes. Wear black and orange striped socks under your shorts. Her shoes are green with orange polka dots, the same tone as her stockings. What type of pattern and colors does Bongo not use today?
Answer:
Ver: Yo veo
. Uds. ven
. Tú ves. Poner: Rita y yo ponemos
. Yo pongo
. Los niños ponen. Hacer: Yo hago. Tú haces
. Ud. hace. Oír: Él oye
. Nosotros oímos
. Yo oigo. Traer: Ellas traen
. Yo traigo
. Tú traes. Suponer: Yo supongo
. Mi amigo supone
. Nosotras suponemos.
Explanation:
Hay diferentes arreglos de verbos y sustantivos dependiendo de la posición de la persona en cuestión. Hay primera persona, segunda y tercera persona. El verbo asignado a cada persona es una función de la posición de la persona. Por ejemplo, yo canto o él canta. Las respuestas a las preguntas se muestran arriba.
Answer:
tiene
Explanation:
Our verb is "tener", so we need to conjugate it accordingly.
"Tener" is a bit of an irregular verb: its "yo" form is very different from its other forms, and it's an "e" to "ie" verb (we change all the first "e's" to "ie's"). So, the conjugations and their respective subjects are:
<em>yo</em> tengo
<em>tú</em> tienes
<em>él/ella/usted</em> tiene
<em>nosotros</em> tenemos
<em>ellos/ellas/ustedes</em> tienen
The subject here is "el maestro", which refers to "the teacher". Because this is a singular subject, we use the <em>él/ella/usted</em> form of "tener", which would be tiene.