It is perhaps clearer in other languages, but conjugated verbs in English<span> can also sometimes tell us something about how many people are participating in the action of the </span>verb<span>. For example, singular subjects (he, she, it) in the present simple tense have an “s” added to them when </span>conjugated<span>: He sings. She reads.</span>
Answer:
1. remains the same
2. …compré…
3. …miraste…
4. …visitó…
5. …celebraron…
6. …compró…
Explanation:
I'm Mexican. You just have to change the verbs
Answer:
Mis tíos siempre quieren (ver) películas en ese cine.
En la escuela mi puede haber trescientos estudiantes.
De niño, no quieres (comer) a mi familia y yo puedo (ir) a España todos los años. Puede (ser) la una de la tarde cuando empezó a llover
Explanation:
There are some Spanish words that consist of the letter ñ, it may also be that the accents are the words that slightly increase their accent
Answer:
I dont really know what your asking for but if it's between the 2 responses you have given it would be the first one
Explanation: