Answer:
Missing Option 9 and 11 (They didn't define any of the 14 questions.
3 and 12 were the questions that were missing an option to be matched with.
1) Que quieres para comer? (5th Option)
2) En la cafeteria hay muchas cosas (12th Option)
3) Quiero una porción de chips (Doesn't appear as an option)
4) Que quieres para beber? (8th Option)
5) Hay helados de mucho sabores (14th Option)
6) Tengo Hambre (7th Option)
7) Mi sabor preferido es chocolate (10th Option)
8) Para beber hay bebidas frias (6th Option)
9) Para comer hay pizzas (1st Option)
10) Quieres un helado? (3rd Option)
11) Quiero un helado de chocolate (2nd Option)
12) Quiero un jugo de naranja (Doesn't appear as an option)
13) Tengo sed (4th Option)
14) Muchas cosas para beber y para comer (13th Option)
Answer:
What was ironic about the fact that it was the Navajo language that the code was based on? A) There were many Japanese code breakers that spoke the Navajo language B) Native American people faced prison time for speaking their own language rather than
The number of years, N(r), since two independently evolving languages split off from a common ancestral language is approximated by N(r)= -5000 1n r, where r is the proportion of the words from the ancestral language that is common to both languages now.
sooo yesss!
Explanation:
Have a nice day.
<em>I </em><em>confused</em><em> </em><em>this </em><em>question</em><em> </em><em>so</em><em> </em><em>I</em><em> </em><em>can't</em><em> </em><em>give</em><em> </em><em>answer</em><em> </em><em>sorry</em>
Answer:
There is no audio so I can't help
Explanation:
Answer:
A.
nada, nadie, ningun, tampoco, algo, nada
B.
alguien, nadie, algun, algunas, algun, ningun, nunca, nada, ninguna, tampoco