Answer:
Most of the time grammar comes after 'common sense" which is inevitable. Grammar rules don't matter anymore when it comes to informal conversation. We only pinpoint grammar errors when we don't understand the statement. So the easiest way to know if the sentence makes sense is to check if in all time subject agrees to its predicate or supporting details.
Explanation:
The answer is 36 years of fighting
I don't really know, but I would think they has a very orginised government that everyone agreed on
<h2>
Explanation:</h2>
When you introduce a clause that describes a noun you previously mentioned in a sentence then you are talking about Relative Pronouns. So relative pronouns connect sentences or phrases. So we have four sets of relative pronouns in Spanish:
que
quien
el que
el/la/los/las que
el/la/los/las cual.
Some uses are the following:
- que - we can use it to refer a person/place
- quien - we can use it only to refer a person
1. 52
2. 24
3. 63
4. 99
5. 26
6. 81
7. Cincuenta y cinco
8. Cien
9. Treinta y tres
10. Cuarenta seis
11. Veinte dos
12. Ochenta
13. Treinta cuatro
14. Doce
15. Siete