Object pronoun (me, you, him, her, it, us, them).
en una notche en la madrugada estaba juganto en el nitento cuanto llego mi madre y padre a desirme que si me dieron unos zapatos nuevos. estaba muy feliz al verlos porque estaban bien chingones y cuestaban mucho. lleganto a la casa de mi tia la que me los compro me dio los zapatos y me los puse de volada y no me los quite estaba muy felis.
<span>
most of us DON'T make a dinstinction between b and v. As mentioned
before, you may hear /b/eso or /v/eso. Of course, the right spelling is
"Beso". But speakers will say in one way or the other without noticing.
And almost nobody can tell them apart. What I mean is that they don't
pay attention to the difference between /b/ and /v/. They will rely
entirely on context.
The difference between those two is already lost. Some radio host try to
keep it. It is funny to listen to them. I try to make the correct
sound. But I have to do an effort to sing a song that goes "pásame la
botella. Voy a beber en nombre de ella". If I say that without paying
attention... I might get some mixed /v/.
I saw this effect when tried for the first time to explain Spanish pronunciation to some friends.
What I tell them is that... natives won't bother to pronounce /b/ and
/v/ as different sounds. But they may mix them very often. And if you
are wondering how to pronounce them... you can chose the way you
pronounce in English and your message will get through perfectly. </span>
Answer:
grocery store
Explanation:
there are things on the list like juice, olive oil, and other things you buy at the grocery store
may the force be with you :)
Answer:
ill help you if u help me with my recent question?
Explanation:
and are you in spanish 1 or 2 or 3?