Answers highlighted in bold, along with casus and genus. Let me know if you have questions.
Wie heißt (your brother)?
1. mein Bruder
2. dein Bruder (nominative, masculine)
3. deine Brüder
4. Ihre Bruder
Er ist (our father).
1. unser Vater (nominative, m)
2. euer Vater
3. ihr Vater
4. euren Vater
Sie hat (his brother) gern.
1. ihre Bruder
2. euren Bruder
3. ihren Bruder (accusative, m)
4. seinen Bruder
Wie heißt (her mother)?
1. ihrer Mutter
2. ihre Mutter (nominative, feminine)
3. eure Mutter
4. unsre Mutter
Siehst du (their child)?
1. ihr Kind (accusative, neutral)
2. unseren Kind
3. euer Kind
4. ihres Kind
Answer:
I feel bad lol XD :p have fun wit that ;p
Explanation:
Http://thedailygood.thegoodtrade.com/cgi-bin/content/view.php?data=schritte_international_2_lehrerhandbuch_free&filetype=pdf&id=227de7e022acfc85ffe4ac8dd287e57d
http://dev.twinsisters.com/schritte_international_3.pdf
http://homolog.meiasola.com.br/cgi-bin/content/view.php?q=schritte+international+2+answer+key&filetype=pdf&id=5745c2ef374afc73fe2e95e18a68962a
http://homolog.meiasola.com.br/cgi-bin/content/view.php?q=schritte+international+1+pdf&filetype=pdf&id=393a5328daebbefb3e7ffffc8bb1e134
Answer:
a. it is actually tschüss
Explanation:
Answer:
there are a lot of similarities between greetings in the US and in Latin America, as probably the most common greeting is "¿hola, qué tal? " which means "hi, what's up".
It can actually be "strengthened" into "¿hola, qué tal?¿cómo estás? "- which repeats the question of "how are you" twice in two different ways -in fact, which was the most common greeting I heard in Mexico.
Some regions in Latin America also have their own, special greeting, for example in Mexico you an also hear ¿qué onda? which is no heard in other places (it literally means "what a wave"! or "what is the wave bringing"
Explanation: