Estoy usando ropa ahora mismo. Llevo pantalones granates. También llevo una camisa atlética gris de lululemon. Mi ropa interior es rosa y mi sujetador a juego es rosa. Mis calcetines son muy cómodos y negro
I think the best answer is A. <span>You should only use </span>tú<span> when talking to people you know well, people who are the same age as you or younger so a sibling would fit. hope this helped, have an amazing day:)</span>
Answer:
1.En la cueva, al caballero andandante le asalta un profundo sueño, quedándose dormido y soñando un encuentro con Montesinos, personaje recurrente de la épica medieval española.
2.A su salida de la cueva, Don Quijote narra ese sueño, que para él ha durado tres días con sus noches, como si fuesen acontecimientos reales.
Explanation:
espero y esto te ayude
The five sentences using the Preterite Tense are:
- <em>El mes pasado</em>, mi hermana <u>bebió</u> dos litros de agua al día.
- Yo <u>comprendí</u> los ejercicios de matemáticas hasta <em>la semana pasada</em>.
- Mis abuelos <u>aprendieron</u> a usar una red social <em>el mes pasado</em>.
- El jugador de futbol <u>vivió</u> en Italia <em>el mes pasado</em>.
- Los vecinos <u>escribieron</u> una carta para el ayuntamiento la semana pasada.
Translation.
- <em>Last month</em>, my sister <u>drank</u> two liters of water a day.
- I <u>understood</u> the math exercises until <em>last week</em>.
- My grandparents <u>learned</u> to use a social network <em>last month</em>.
- The soccer player <u>lived</u> in Italy <em>last month</em>.
- Neighbors <u>wrote</u> a letter to the city council <em>last week</em>.
<em>Conjugation of verbs in the </em><em>Preterite Tense</em>.
In Spanish, verbs conjugated in the <em>preterite tense</em> regularly have an accent mark when accompanied by a noun that corresponds to the first or third person. The following is the way in which it most usually ends, taking into account the personal pronoun used:
- <em>Yo</em><em>:</em> The verb in the preterite tense usually ends in "é, í".
- <em>Tú</em><em>:</em> The verb in the preterite tense usually ends in "aste, iste".
- <em>Usted / Él / Ella</em><em>:</em> The verb in the preterite tense usually ends in "ó".
- <em>Nosotros / Nosotras</em><em>: </em>The verb in the preterite tense usually ends in "amos, imos".
- <em>Ustedes / Ellos / Ellas</em><em>: </em>The verb in the preterite tense usually ends in "ieron".
<em>Fulfillment of requests</em>.
The sentences made fully comply with activities that occurred <u><em>last week or last month</em></u>. The three regular verbs ending in ER used were: beb<u>er</u>, entend<u>er</u>, and aprend<u>er</u>. On the other hand, the two regular verbs ending in IR used were: viv<u>ir</u> and escrib<u>ir</u>.
More information:
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Answer:
It would be Preparo el jugo con las frutas. (A)
Explanation:
las frutas means "the fruit" and your incomplete sentence describes that you are making "juice" and it is common sense that juice is made out of fruit, not a fork or "the cold".
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