Answer:
1. La camarera te lo sirvió.
2. Isabel nos las trajo a la mesa.
3. Javier me los pidió anoche.
4. El dueño nos la busca.
5. Tu madre me los consigue.
6. ¿Te lo recomendaron Lola y Paco?
Explanation:
It is called a direct object to the function that assumes a syntactic constituent, different from the grammatical subject, which is mandatorily requested by a transitive verb. Also known as a direct complement, its function is related to the accusative case.
In Spanish, the direct object can always be replaced by "la”, “las”, “lo” or “los”.
Answer:
<u>Ella</u> es <u>la</u> amiga de Miguel.
<u>Tu</u> eres <u>un</u> estudiante nuevo de Guatemala.
<u>Nosotros</u> no somos <u>los</u> estudiantes del señor Vargas.
The answer is d because when you talk about yourself in spanish it ends with “o”
<span>It is better just to translate the sentence so that you will know which options you can omit and on which you have to focus. In English this sentence means 'I want this shirt and not that one'. Now you can easily understand that this task is not about tenses as it is focused on the usage of demonstrative pronouns like 'this (esta)' and 'that(aquella)'. Therefore, the correct answer is: demonstrative pronouns.</span>