<span>
most of us DON'T make a dinstinction between b and v. As mentioned
before, you may hear /b/eso or /v/eso. Of course, the right spelling is
"Beso". But speakers will say in one way or the other without noticing.
And almost nobody can tell them apart. What I mean is that they don't
pay attention to the difference between /b/ and /v/. They will rely
entirely on context.
The difference between those two is already lost. Some radio host try to
keep it. It is funny to listen to them. I try to make the correct
sound. But I have to do an effort to sing a song that goes "pásame la
botella. Voy a beber en nombre de ella". If I say that without paying
attention... I might get some mixed /v/.
I saw this effect when tried for the first time to explain Spanish pronunciation to some friends.
What I tell them is that... natives won't bother to pronounce /b/ and
/v/ as different sounds. But they may mix them very often. And if you
are wondering how to pronounce them... you can chose the way you
pronounce in English and your message will get through perfectly. </span>
The affirmative usted (You) and tener is (have)
1. aprende
2. corres
3. el/correr (corre)
3. nosotros/correr (corremos)
4. aprendemos
5. bebes
6. aprendo
7. bebemos
8. bebe
9. aprendes
10. vosotros/aprender (aprendeis)
10. ellas/aprender (aprenden
11. bebeis
12. corro
13. corren
14. ustedes/beber (beben)
14. yo/beber (bebo)
Answer:
Explanation:
1. Los dedos son parte de la mano
2. Las rodillas son parte de las piernas
3. Los codos son parte de los brazos
4. Los dientes son parte de la boca
5. El cabello es parte de la cabeza
Answer:
$26 per ticket
Explanation:
The equation will be p = 8x where p is the price he paid and x is the cost of 1 ticket. Then,
208 = 8x
x = 208/8
x = 26.
Then, each tickets costs $26.