1. Tú
2.vosotros
3.yo
4.Ella
5. nosotras
In 1954, seventy-four years after the U.S. Supreme Court held that African Americans could not be banned from jury service by statute, and fifty-four years after it ruled that they could not be purposely excluded from venires due to their “race or color” through court, executive, or administrative action,[1] the Court found that Pete Hernandez had been denied equal protection of the laws under the Fourteenth Amendment. His constitutional rights were violated because of the de facto, systematic exclusion of Mexican Americans from the pool of potential jurors–and thus juries–in Jackson County, Texas.[2]
I don't know the first one but the second one is "pierde:
Answer:
Enrique Araneda es más joven que Antonio Suárez. 2. Enrique Araneda tiene más hijos que Antonio Suárez. 3. El candidato conservador tiene más experiencia política que el liberal. 4. Antonio Suárez es más rico que Enrique Araneda. 5. El candidato liberal tiene más estudios que el conservador. 6. El candidato conservador está más afiliado a organizaciones que el liberal.
Explanation:
When comparing two things, we use the formula más + que to refer which , in this case , person have more of one qualification. Superior comparison. Comparative adjectives allow us to compare two or more things. There are two constructions for forming comparatives: más/menos + adjective + que; or tan + adjective + como. The adjective ending agrees in number and gender with the noun it describes.