To my best knowledge there is not a direct translation from that name.
I think is: Carolina las compra en la floristería al lado del supermercado.
Answer:
<em><u>De </u></em><em><u>un </u></em><em><u>mundo </u></em><em><u>de </u></em><em><u>cosas </u></em><em><u>fantásticas</u></em><em><u> </u></em><em><u>,</u></em><em><u>animales </u></em><em><u>que </u></em><em><u>hablas,</u></em><em><u> criaturas</u></em><em><u> </u></em><em><u>enormes,</u></em><em><u>un </u></em><em><u>mundo </u></em><em><u>lleno </u></em><em><u>de </u></em><em><u>aventuras</u></em>
The verb caer means 'to fall,' and it can be used in the two past tenses, preterite and imperfect, to describe things falling in the past. ... When it's used in the imperfect tense, it's describing repeated falls in the past.