In the criminal justice field negotiation is hard to master because some criminals know how to manipulate the system. Criminals will say anything just to reduce their sentence.
The correct options with reflexive pronouns to fill the blanks are:
Lionel Messi siempre <u>se acuesta</u> a dormir unas horas cuando termina de almorzar. ¿tú también <u>te vas</u> a dormir la siesta después del mediodía?
Translation.
Lionel Messi always <u>goes</u> to bed for a few hours when he finishes lunch. Are you also <u>going to</u> take a nap after noon?
<em>Reflexives pronouns</em><em>.</em>
This type of pronouns is <u><em>used to mention that the action falls on the same person who performed it</em></u>. Depending on the personal pronoun used, the reflexive pronouns are:
- <em>Yo: </em>me
- <em>Tú:</em> <u>te</u>
- <em>Usted:</em> se
- <em>Él: </em><u>se</u>
- <em>Ella:</em> se
- <em>Ello: </em>se
- <em>Nosotros / Nosotras:</em> nos
- <em>Ustedes:</em> se
- <em>Ellos / Ellas:</em> se
In the case of the paragraph in Spanish, the first part refers to Lionel Messi, which can be replaced by the personal pronoun "él" and whose reflexive pronoun is "<u>se</u>," while the second uses the personal pronoun "tú" with the reflexive pronoun "<u>te</u>."
If you want to learn more information about reflexive pronouns in Spanish, you can visit the following link: brainly.com/question/857756?referrer=searchResults
It is perhaps clearer in other languages, but conjugated verbs in English<span> can also sometimes tell us something about how many people are participating in the action of the </span>verb<span>. For example, singular subjects (he, she, it) in the present simple tense have an “s” added to them when </span>conjugated<span>: He sings. She reads.</span>
El actor ensaya las escenas , mientras el tramoyista prepara la escenografía.
The correct answer is ensaya las escenas , prepara la escenografía.