I'm pretty sure the correct answer is D, not B.
"Conoces tu el Valle de Silicio" makes more sense than "Sabes tu el Valle de Silicio". By saying "Conoces tu el Valle de Silicio" you are properly asking in Spanish "Do you know of the Silicone Valley?" or "Do you know about the Silicone Valley?"
So I would go with D, and Spanish is my native language.
<h2>Right answer</h2><h3>serio</h3><h3 />
In this exercise, <em>Julieta</em> and <em>Nicolás </em>are being described using two different adjectives. So the adjective that describes <em>Julieta </em>is <em>graciosa (funny). </em>It is given in feminine and singular form because adjectives must agree with nouns they describe in both gender and number, that is, <em>Julieta</em> is a feminine and singular noun. From the list, the only adjective that is related to the one that describes <em>Julieta </em>is <em>serio </em>because this is the opposite characteristic of being funny, that is, <em>serio </em>means <em>serious.</em>
“Carne” is a source of protein, ”carne” translates to meat.
Hope this helps, have a good day :)
Answer:
<em>D:</em> hago, haces, hace, hacemos, hacéis, hacen
Explanation:
Yo hago
Tu haces
Él/Ella/Usted hace
Nosostros hacemos
Vosotros hacéis
Ellos/Ellas/Ustedes hacen
It is Veintidós that means twenty two