Answer:
¿El Señor García cocinará una de sus platos deliciosos para la feria de gastronomía?
Después de terminar mis estudios me dedicaré al trabajo comunitario.
¿Qué dia será hoy? No veo el calendario.
Explanation:
I'm Spanish ::)
This is the complete paragraph using the correct verbs conjugated in the simple present tense and the preterite tense:
En casa todos estamos muy bien. Diego ya (1) <u>comió</u> bien y (2) <u>compartió</u> todo con su gemelo, Bernardo. Mamá y Alejandra (3) <u>corren</u> todas las mañanas en el parque y yo (4) <u>asisto</u> a mis clases todos los días. Y tú, ¿cómo estás? ¿Cuándo (5) <u>vienes</u>? ¿Por qué no (6) <u>escribes</u>? Tu hija, Marcela.
<h3>When do you use the simple present tense and the preterite tense?</h3>
On one hand, you use the Spanish simple present tense (''presente del indicativo'' in Spanish) when you want to talk about habitual situations, routines, universal truths and facts.
On the other hand, you use the Spanish preterite tense ("pretérito perfecto simple" in Spanish) when you want to talk about actions completed at some point in the past.
Check more information about the simple present tense brainly.com/question/25856028
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14) unos
15) un
16) unas
17) unos
18) una
19) está
20) están
21) está
22) estas
<u>Answer</u>
<em>According to NCSU, Developing a new vaccine from scratch takes considerable time. It depends a lot on how much information is available about the disease itself, how the disease infects people and spreads, and so on. But it traditionally has taken 5-10 years to get a new vaccine.</em>
<em>In my opinion, it depends. This means that it could take as little time or a long time. In general, it would take some time, but not much to this day. It would most likely take lots of years for </em><u><em>everyone in the world</em></u><em> to get the vaccines though.</em>
<em>#TeamTrees</em>
<em>Hope this helps! <3</em>
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