Answer: Every proper sentence in Spanish must have a subject and a verb. There is also a proper place for subjects and verbs in a sentence. Begin a sentence with the subject (the person, place, or thing you're talking about). Follow that with the verb, and then the rest of the sentence (where, how, etc).
<span>EARTH'S moon has a split personality. One half of its surface—the half which, thanks to the vagaries of orbital mechanics, always faces Earth—is dominated by dark, smooth expanses of ancient, frozen lava known as maria (early astronomers, thinking they might be bodies of water, named them after the Latin word for “sea”). The contrast between the darkness of the maria and the brightness of the surrounding highlands forms a pattern popularly known, depending on the culture of the observer, as the man in the moon, the rabbit on the moon or one of many other optical illusio</span>
Answer:
Me gusta la banda de Zack Brown y no me gustan los Island Boys.
Explanation:
Based on what you learned from the lesson, which country are Estela and Ana describing?
Spain
Answer: diremos
Nosotros le diremos todo a la señora.
Translation: We will tell everything to the lady.