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Zepler [3.9K]
4 years ago
15

What is a “turn” program? Explain how it works.

Spanish
1 answer:
topjm [15]4 years ago
7 0

could you mean turn key program? if so turn key is a product or service that is designed, supplied, built, or installed fully complete and ready to operate.

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What is tge appropriate vocabulary in Spanish? <br>Voy a la _ a comprar rosas​
luda_lava [24]

Answer:

Voy a la florería a comprar rosas​

7 0
3 years ago
¿________ tú el pescado?<br><br> Comemos<br> Como<br> Comes<br> Come
Alex Ar [27]

Answer:

Comes

The verb refers to an individual.

6 0
4 years ago
During the Spanish Armada who/what defeated the Spanish? *
denpristay [2]

Answer:

option:A british

Explanation:

Off the coast of Gravelines, France, Spain's so-called “Invincible Armada” is defeated by an English naval force under the command of Lord Charles Howard and Sir Francis Drake.

5 0
3 years ago
In spanish can you help me understand the prefixes and suffixes for spanish words
Lady_Fox [76]

Do you want to increase your Spanish vocabulary? One sure-fire way is to take the words you already know and learn how to apply suffixes to them.

Suffixes are simply word endings that can be used to modify a word's meaning. We use them in English all the time, and nearly all of them that we use in English have a Spanish equivalent. But Spanish has an even wider variety, and their usage isn't always as obvious as it would be in English.

Take a common word like manteca, for example. That's the word for lard, a much-used cooking ingredient in Mexico and some other Spanish-speaking countries. Add the ending -illa, a common ending, and it becomes mantequilla, or butter. Add the ending -ero, and it becomes mantequero, which can mean either a dairyman or a butter dish. (The spelling is changed from c to qu to maintain the pronunciation.) Add the ending -ada, and it becomes mantecada, or buttered toast. Add -ado, and it becomes mantecado, or french ice cream.

Unfortunately, and the above words are an example, it isn't always possible to figure out what a word means simply by knowing the root word and the suffixes. But the suffixes may give enough clues that in context you can make a more educated guess. For example, the -ado and -ada endings are often the equivalent of the English "-ed." So it isn't hard to see how <span>mantecada </span>could come to mean something buttered, just as in English "a malted" can refer to a milkshake with malt in it.

Spanish suffixes can roughly be classified as diminutives, augmentatives, pejoratives, English cognates, and miscellaneous ones. And one, the adverbial suffix, is in a class of its own.

4 0
3 years ago
Hi once again help lol
hjlf

What is the question?

8 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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