Answer:
<u>dǎpòde chuānghu hàipà</u>
<u>xiǎo háizi(háir) shēngqì</u>
<u>lǎorén tiào qǐ lái</u>
<u>lǎo tài tai pǎo</u>
láng wēixiào
dà huài láng shānghài
gǒu děng yíxià
tāmen qiāoqiāo mén
tāde Měi guānxi
qiú měi shì
<u>mén hùi bú hùi</u>
<u>bízi yǒu</u>
<u>wēixiǎn </u>méi yǒu
shùlín kànzhe / kànjiàn
jiē rènwéi
<u>fángzi dàshēng hǎn dào</u>
<u>zài shùlín lǐ dǎpò le</u>
<u>zài shàng</u>
<u>lǐ bú hùi</u>
Explanation:
En pocas palabras, tanto el coloquialismo como la jerga son formas habladas del idioma. Ambos usan palabras y expresiones informales. La jerga es más informal que el lenguaje coloquial. La jerga es utilizada predominantemente por ciertos grupos de personas, mientras que la gente común usa el lenguaje coloquial en el habla cotidiana.
Answer:
- <u>Translated from Spanish language:</u>
"True or false? Multiple choice Activity Audio Textbook Instructions Listen to the sentences and indicate if what each one says is true or false, according to the drawing. February 19 11:59 PM 1 attempt remaining."
Hello:
1. Spanish - Hola!
2. French - Bonjour!
3. Serbian - Zdravo!
4. Finnish - Hei!
5. Japanese - <span>Kon'nichiwa!
Favorite language is something subjective - for me, it is the English language, but it can be any language for you. </span>
Answer:
As you might expect (after reading about the components of emotion), people tend to respond similarly in terms of physiological (or bodily) expression. Also, our ability to recognize and produce facial expressions of emotion appears to be universal. Research conducted with individuals born blind at birth found that the same facial expression of emotions were produced (smiling when happy, frowning when sad), despite these individuals never having the opportunity to observe these facial displays of emotion in other people. This suggests that facial muscles movements involved in generating emotional expressions is universal and not the result of learned behavior. Charles Darwin’s book The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals (1872) very similar morphology in the facial expressions of non-human primates like chimpanzees and orangutans to human facial expressions. In fact, there is substantial evidence for seven universal emotions that are each associated with distinct facial expressions. These include: happiness, surprise, sadness, fright, disgust, contempt, and anger (Ekman & Keltner, 1997).