<span>
Yo pido que tú me </span><span>acompañes</span>
Answer:
<u><em>English- </em></u>
I
You
He, She, You
We
You all
They, you all
<u><em>vs.</em></u>
<u><em>Spanish- </em></u>
Yo
Tú
éL, ella, usted
Nosotros
Vosotros ( only used in spain )
Ellos, Ellas, Ustedes
Explanation:
I hope that helped, conjugation of our verbs in English doesn't often change however it does a lot in spanish. I'd suggest memorizing the common ones that you know you'll use, the verb and the conjugation. The pronouns come naturally. The way I practice is by writing sentences and paragraphs when learning. Each subject pronoun can be used for a different person whether informally or formally.
[ex. Tú vs. Usted
Tú: friend, family member, etc.
Usted: Someone in a position that requires respect]
Yes, because it talks about how the first conseptual nursing model was and all her occupations and it is interesting to know why she was known and what she did.
It should be "se la" in the two blanks.