The answer is C. Lo because is says visitar el centro
Answer:
Querido pedro ire a Mexico este viernes . Ire con mi familia y me hospedare en la ciudad de Mexico en un hotel nuevo. Tambien ire a visitar a mi tia lucia que vive cerca de el hotel . Luego ire en auto a la playa y me refrescare en el oceano. Cuando valla al oceano me quedare en otro hotel . En ese hotel comere testiculos de Toro con arroz porque ese es su plato especial . Ademas tratare de sorfiar en las noches mirando a la luna llena . Sera una experiencia majestuosa. Una cosa que no hare es estar triste porque quiero disfrutar lo mas que pueda. En fin Pedro ire de vacaciones y disfrutare al maximo
Let's go through the words. "Corrio" comes from the verb "correr," which means "to run." The suffix "-io" is the past tense of the el/ella/Ud. form. So, "corrio" means he/she/you/it ran.
"Cerca de" means close to, so that's probably a phrase. "Bicicleta" is bicycle, and that's a female noun, so we'll have to put the "la" (female "the") in front of "bicicleta."
"Perro" is a dog. It's a male noun, and "un" means "a" for a male noun, so these probably go together to. "Muy" means very--this probably also goes with "close to," describing a position.
So translated, we get: "ran the to close bicycle dog very a." Let's review the phrases we have: "a dog," "very close to," and "the bicycle." All that's missing is "ran," which must go after the dog. So, "a dog ran very close to the bicycle." That's a reasonable sentence!
Let's translate it back to Spanish. "A dog" translates to "un perro," "ran" to "corrio," "very close to" is "muy cerca de," and "the bicycle" is "la bicicleta. What do we get? "Un perro corrio muy cerca de la bicicleta."
Answer: un perro corrio muy cerca de la bicicleta
Answer:
•No, yo siempre hago la comida!
Explanation: