Answer:
lets just say the friends name is "anthony"
hola esta es mi amigo anthony
Explanation:
im not sure if this is entirely right but i think its something along this line
Answer:
Hace una semana "dije" que tenia que ejercitarme y hoy lo hice.
A mis padres les "traduje" una carta de la escuela.
Mi hermano me "condujo" por mi nueva ciudad.
Explanation:
I hope this helps, Espero ayude.
Answer:
cuanto tiempo llevas tomando lecciones?
Explanation:
Answer:
Ellos / ellas / ustedes = traerían
Tú = Mirarías
Yo / él / ella /usted = comería
Nosotros = iríamos
Explanation:
Ellos (they-masculine) / ellas (they-femenine) / ustedes (you-plural): is used for two or more people, the ending "ían" is always for two or more people.
Tú (you): you, a single person, "ías" is always for the person you are talking to.
Yo (I) // él (he - him) // ella (she - her) // usted (you-politely): all of them are used with the ending "ía". "Usted" is used if you talk to an older person, and you finish verbs as if you where talking to them in third person.
Nosotros (we-us): always ending with "íamos"
<span>It is better just to translate the sentence so that you will know which options you can omit and on which you have to focus. In English this sentence means 'I want this shirt and not that one'. Now you can easily understand that this task is not about tenses as it is focused on the usage of demonstrative pronouns like 'this (esta)' and 'that(aquella)'. Therefore, the correct answer is: demonstrative pronouns.</span>