1. Tu
2. Usted
3. Tu
4. Usted
5. Tu
6. Usted
7. Usted
8. Tu
9. Usted
10. Ustedes
11. Usted
12. Tu
13. Usted
14. Tu ( maybe)
15. Tu
16. Tu
17. Tu ( because of the nametag)
18. Tu
1. Pablo y Mercedes al aeropuerto en autob(u)s.
2. Los botones de las maletas est(a)n en nuestras habitaciones.
3. ?Ustedes escribieron ya las cartas?
4. Nuestra reservaci(o)n est(a) a las once de la ma(n)ana.
5. No podemos jugar ahora porque tenemos que entrar a la habitaci(o)n.
6. ?Qui(e)n tiene las maletas?
7. Ay de mi. Felipe y Gloria se las dejaron en el aeropuerto. Tendremos que ir de compras ahora.
In 1954, seventy-four years after the U.S. Supreme Court held that African Americans could not be banned from jury service by statute, and fifty-four years after it ruled that they could not be purposely excluded from venires due to their “race or color” through court, executive, or administrative action,[1] the Court found that Pete Hernandez had been denied equal protection of the laws under the Fourteenth Amendment. His constitutional rights were violated because of the de facto, systematic exclusion of Mexican Americans from the pool of potential jurors–and thus juries–in Jackson County, Texas.[2]
Answer:
I can't understand what you are saying
Explanation:
<em>Hello There!!</em>
<em>The right answer is:</em>
<em>Tú.</em>
<em>Because, That will be the better answer to say that.....</em>
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