Answer:
Explanation:
<em>Pagaba con tarjeta de crédito casi siempre. (</em><em> hoy / casi siempre )</em>
<em>She/he paid with a credit card usually.</em>
<em>Hoy, in Spanish language, means today. If that was the case, it would mean that the action that occurred is totally over, so we would use another tense. We would used pagó, which is a preterite tense, in the third person singular form.</em>
<em>Because the correct answer is casi siempre, which means, usually, we would use a imperfect tense, in the third person singular form, just like we did. We use this tense for some actions in the past, that don't seem like they've ever finished, as well as for actions that we don't know when they started and when and if they finished. </em>
Answer:C: the number of the noun
Explanation:
When we use possessive adjectives like tu, tus, mis etc we are matching them with the number of the noun, plural or not, example,
"Tus calcetines"
TUS is a plural possesive adjective and calcetines is the plural noun of calcetin
"TU calcetin"
TU is singular, and calcetin is a singular noun
Answer:
ssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss
Explanation:
- Ellas los cocinan.
- No lo voy a invitar.
- Necesito tomarla en el verano.
- Los niños la van a mirar en casa.
- No los queremos comprar rojos.
- Mi madre siempre lo prepara el viernes.
- No lo vamos a visitar.
- Miguel y yo lo miramos anoche.
- La necesito para mi clase.
- Ana no lo toma con la clase.
- ¿Quieres comprarlo?
- No las tengo.
- El botones las trae.
- Necesitamos llamarlo.
- Los recibió.
- Nunca la estudio.
- Mi perro no lo come.
- Los quiero mucho.
- Lucila los necesita.
The direct object is replaced if it is <u>feminine</u> "la (singular), las (plural)" and if it is <u>masculine</u> it is "lo (singular), los (plural).
<h3><em><u>MissSpanish</u></em></h3>