Answer:
- tener que
- tener frío
- tener hambre
- tener sed
- tener calor
- tener cuidado
- tener...años...
Explanation:
These are some of the many expressions that can be used with the verb tener.
- Tengo que ir al supermercado. I have to go to the grocery store.
- Es invierno y todos los chicos tienen frío. It is winter and all the boys are cold.
- Mi hermana siempre tiene hambre. My sister is always hungry.
- Tenemos mucha sed después de entrenar en el gimnasio. We are very thirsty after working out in the gym.
- Mi Papá tiene calor porque lleva una chaqueta gruesa. My Dad is hot because he's wearing a thick jacket.
- Los especialistas tienen mucho cuidado con el animal herido. The specialists handle the injured animal with care.
- Vosotros tenéis veinte años y yo tengo diecinueve. You guys are twenty-one, and I'm nineteen.
<span>The analysis of how people relate to each other is known as A) human resources. B) anthropology. C) reinforcement. D) human relations.
Helpful?</span>
C because though it’s states facts about food (that cause acne) it doesn’t specify acne in the sentence it just states the food.
Whenever you are making an inference it has something to do with a certain quote or something that’s from the passage. That gives you evidence about your guess.
I cannot see the full excerpt, but from the entire work here is what I see.
...But thought I have wept and fasted, wept and prayed,
though I have seen my head brought in upon a platter,
I am no prophet...
This refers to John the Baptist when he gets his head put on a platter. John was a prophet. (Matthew 14 and Mark 6)
..."I am Lazarus, come from the dead..."
Jesus raised a man named Lazarus from the dead as recorded in the Bible. (John 11)