Oy it's Monday. On Saturday I go on a trip. I have five days, right? Yes, (1) I have. I have to get a round trip ticket. Essential! My brother works in a travel agency; he (2) gets me easily. I have to look for a good map of the city. On the Internet (3) I can find. And in the library I can find books about the country; books about its history, its architecture, its geography, its people ... (4) I will read on the plane. I also want to buy a new backpack. But (5) I want very big. And where is my old camera? (6) I have to search tonight. I'm going to take lots of pictures; my family (7) wants to see. And ... when will I pack? (8) I have to do on Wednesday. And that's it, is not it? No, it's not everything. I need to find a companion or a traveling companion. But, there is a small problem: where (9) encounter or (10) encounter? HERE U GO AMIGO
¡Aquí ___estoy___ en chicago! Chicago __es__ una gran ciudad con muchas personas que __son___ muy interesantes. la comida __es___ fantástica. La especialidad __es___ la pizza. ¡qué rica! vivo con una familia muy simpática. Tienen un hijo que siempre __está___ contento y una hija que ___es__ muy estudiosa. ¡__Son____ las nueve de la noche y ella __está___ en la biblioteca! Los chicos de la escuela también ___son___ estudiosos, pero no muy serios. Mis compañeros y yo ___somos__ muy buenos amigos y ____estamos__ juntos todos los fines de semana. Una amiga, Vera, __es___ boliviana y ___es___ divertidísima. Vera y yo ___estamos__ en la misma clase de biología. Bueno, mamá, __es___ muy tarde. Mañana voy a ___estar___ muy ocupada y necesito dormir. pero sabes
Recall the pronoun chart:
Yo || Nosotros
Tu || (vosotros)
Usted/el/ella || Ustedes/ellos/ellas
We can immediately eliminate B and C, because ellos is "them" not "you all" and usted is the singular "you".
This is a tricky question because in Spain, remember that they use vosotros, unlike in Latin America. But if you look at the chart, remember that tu is an informal pronoun; if its plural counterpart is vosotros, then vosotros must also be informal. Ustedes, on the other hand, is the formal version of "you all". It is used as the informal AND formal "you all" in Latin America, but in Spain it acts only as the formal pronoun.
So if you are talking to two or more people in Spain, you'll want to use option D, ustedes.
The opposite word would be D) bueno
Enojado goes wit -a mad
Contento goes wit -a happy ;content
Acostado goes wit -a in bed
Muerto goes wit - a dead
Sorprendido goes wit - a surprised
Aburrido goes wit -a bored