1. Hodie viis ad Europam ambulamus.
2. Romanas terras pugnis non occupabunt!
3. Carro et equo ex provinciis cibum portabamus.
4. Romani ("The Romans" - nom. pl) deos templis, sacrificiis et statuis laudabant.
5. Servus in arena gladio pugnabit.
Your sentences are in Latin.
I provided a translation of them in English for you below.
1. Today we walk the way to Europe.
2. Roman lands punches not occupy!
3. cars and horse carrying food from the provinces.
4. Roman ( "The Roman" - nom. Pl) gods, temples and statues meal mask.
5. The slave sword fight in the arena.
I'm not sure if you wanted a translation or what. You didn't provide any directions.
If this wasn't what you where looking for, just comment below and I will change my answer.
Hope I hepled otherwise!!
Good app to use is Chegg Study
D) person vs person//i took a quiz on it
<span>The simple Bard,<u> rough</u> at the rustic <u>plough</u>,
Learning his tuneful trade from ev'ry <u>bough</u>;
The chanting linnet, or the mellow <u>thrush</u>,
Hailing the setting sun, sweet, in the green thorn<u> bush</u>;
The soaring lark, the perching red-breast <u>shrill</u>,
Or deep-ton'd plovers grey, wild-whistling o'er the<u> hill</u>
Shall he-nurst in the peasant's lowly <u>shed</u>,
To hardy independence bravely <u>bred</u>,
By early poverty to hardship steel'd.
eye rhymes are words that have similarity in spelling but are different in pronunciation.</span>
Answer:
Brazil
Explanation:
Brazilians speak Portuguese