Answer:
i will help any way i can.just lemme know when u post em
Explanation:
Answer:
Llevo pantalones y una camisa con botones. Por lo general, me gusta usar mis zapatos grises. También me gusta usar sombreros verdes con puntos en ellos. finalmente uso mi reloj todos los días
Explanation:
Oraciones con la palabra<u> incurrió</u>
Answers :
Durante el juicio, el testigo <u>incurrió</u> en varias contradicciones.
Llamó por teléfono desde el extranjero e <u>incurrió</u> en gastos adicionales.
Dio positivo en el control de alcoholemia e <u>incurrió</u> en responsabilidad criminal.
El tribunal <u>incurrió</u> en un error de apreciación al denegar el recurso.
El estudiante fue suspendido porque <u>incurrió</u> en irregularidades.
Hope this helps!
Answer:
¿por suerte a tu novio?...
<span>A borrowed word is one taken over directly from another language. Cognates are words with common roots in an earlier parent language with certain idiomatic changes. They can also occur several times in the same language: "shirt" and "skirt" are derived from the same word ultimately borrowed from Old Norse: "skyrta".
"Kindergarten" is a direct borrowing from German and means the same thing on both sides of the Atlantic.
"Der Container" in German is not just anything that contains something else, but one of those giant trash things you see on building sites or a shipping container that doubles as a boxcar. The word is international and shorter than, say, "Großraumbehälter."
By contrast:
"deer" is cognate with German "Tier", though a "Tier" is any animal, "Tiergarten" = zoo.
"house" is German "Haus", Dutch "huis", Norwegian/Swedish/Danish "hus", all meaning, surprise, surprise, "house."
None of these words were borrowed from another language, but descended independently from Proto-Germanic.
If correct please mark as brainlist? have a blessed day</span>