I think the answer is B spanihs people love there chicken and rice :D
Answer:
<u>Question 1:</u> Mario, tráeme la cámara digital que le regaló Gema
<u>Question 2:</u> Natalia, escríbele un mensaje de texto a su hermana
<u>Question 3:</u> Martín, llámalos por teléfono celular
<u>Question 4:</u> Gloria, haz la cama antes de salir
<u>Question 5:</u> Carmen, no revises el aceite hasta la semana que viene.
<u>Question 6:</u> Lilia, enséñame a maneja.
Explanation:
Commands are conjugated as:
<u>Hacer (affirmative)</u>
Tu, haz
Nosotros, hagamos
Ustedes, hagan
<u>Hacer (negative)</u>
Tu, no hagas
Nosotros, no hagamos
Ustedes, no hagan
You think you possess characteristics that a compelling application
This question is incomplete. Here is the complete question:
Write sentences that use ser + de to indicate where the people are from
:
Lina y María / Colombia
El profesor / México
Tú y los jóvenes / Argentina
Las estudiantes / Estados Unidos
Ellos / Canadá
La mujer / Puerto Rico
Los Turistas / España
Él y yo / Chile
Nosotras / Cuba
Usted / Venezuela
Answer:
Lina y María son de Colombia
El profesor es de México
Tú y los jóvenes son de Argentina
Las estudiantes son de Estados Unidos
Ellos son de Canadá
La mujer es de Puerto Rico
Los Turistas son de España
Él y yo somos de Chile
Nosotras somos de Cuba
Usted es de Venezuela
Explanation:
In Spanish, the verbs <em>ser </em>and <em>estar </em>have very different meanings for native speakers. In English these correspond to a single verb (to be), so it is essential to learn to distinguish them correctly in Spanish.
The verb<em> ser </em>is used in Spanish in the following situations:
- inherent physical appearance or personality traits;
- permanent identity or traits (nationality, creed, etc);
- family or personal relationships;
- when or where an event takes place;
- the date, seasons and time;
- the material, the origin or the belonging of an object + preposition of;
-
The way to conjugate it in present simple is as follows:
- yo soy
- tú eres
- él es
- nos. somos
- vos. sois
- ellos son
Answer:
That's easy! So easy I'm not going to tell you the answer. But I will tell you what each of the words mean:
Adiós, mamá. : Goodbye Mother
Hola: Hi
Hasta luego: See you later
Igualmente: equally, alike
Mucho gusto
: In some countries, such as Costa Rica, mucho gusto is also used to say you're welcome. Or Nice to meet you
Explanation: