I dont get what the question is, but all these things mean:<span>Anything/complain/Joseph and me/for anything in/them/details/To set/films/what/dress/ME/to wear?</span>
I'm pretty sure the correct answer is D, not B.
"Conoces tu el Valle de Silicio" makes more sense than "Sabes tu el Valle de Silicio". By saying "Conoces tu el Valle de Silicio" you are properly asking in Spanish "Do you know of the Silicone Valley?" or "Do you know about the Silicone Valley?"
So I would go with D, and Spanish is my native language.
No es cierto que nosotros celebramos esta festividad.
A. celebramos
Creo que la moraleja de la historia no es demasiado agradable. La razón por la que creo que la historia se basa en ese aspecto es que el camello al final de la historia actúa de manera egoísta. El camello solo se preocupa por si mismo. Al camello no le importa lo que el maestro siente. El camello aprovecha la simpática personalidad del maestro.
*
I think the moral of the story is not too nice. The reason why I think the story is based on that aspect is that the camel at the end of the story acts selfishly. The camel only cares for itself. The camel does not care what the teacher feels. The camel takes advantage of the sympathetic personality of the master.*