In 1954, seventy-four years after the U.S. Supreme Court held that African Americans could not be banned from jury service by statute, and fifty-four years after it ruled that they could not be purposely excluded from venires due to their “race or color” through court, executive, or administrative action,[1] the Court found that Pete Hernandez had been denied equal protection of the laws under the Fourteenth Amendment. His constitutional rights were violated because of the de facto, systematic exclusion of Mexican Americans from the pool of potential jurors–and thus juries–in Jackson County, Texas.[2]
Answer:
1. Resfriado (común, fuerte)
2. Tensión (arterial, ocular)
3. Trasplante (hepático, renal)
4. Reacción (alérgica, cutánea)
5. Receta (médica, farmacéutica)
Answer:
1. Perdí las llaves.
2. Se olvidaron las llaves.
3. Se cayó la botella.
4. Dejaste el dinero en casa.
5. Ella rompió sus gafas.
Explanation:
The Simple Preterite indicates an enunciated action that is considered finished. It applies to actions completed in the past that are not necessarily related to the factual status of the present situation.
It is used in Spanish to express: actions that take place at a certain moment in the past in a timely manner or a new action that occurs in the past and that interrupts a course of action that was already in progress and that is expressed in the past tense.
Answer:
¿Ya hiciste la tarea?
Sí, <u>las</u> hice anoche.
Explanation:
'Las' because it refers to one thing: 'la tarea'. Also, it is a feminine noun.
Answer:
D. camine
Explanation:
I speak spanish my parents are from guatemala