1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
xxMikexx [17]
4 years ago
12

¿qué deciden hacer gastón y lucía? ¿siguen la recomendación de quién? ¿por qué gastón y lucía quieren conseguir entradas para es

tudiantes? ¿cómo y cuándo pueden conseguir entradas para estudiantes? ¿qué ocurre cuando llegan a la oficina de la escuela? ¿qué le piden a la secretaria? ¿crees que ellos consiguen las entradas?
Spanish
1 answer:
fenix001 [56]4 years ago
4 0

What does Gaston and Lucia decide to do? follow the recommendation of WHO? Why gastón and lucía want to get tickets for students? How and when can they get tickets for students? What happens when they arrive at the school office? What do they ask the secretary? Do you think they get the tickets?

You might be interested in
Humberto muy en su gran cama nueva (new). Question 2 with 2 blanksLos estudiantes de filosofía no ; ellos tienen razón. Question
Afina-wow [57]
Ok........so Google translate helped out a bit and I'm not so sure an this: Humberto very in his big new bed (new). Question 2 with 2 blanks Philosophy students don't; They are right. Question 3 with 2 blanksWhen Estela gets home at three in the morning, very. Question 4 with 2 blanksThe room because I don't have time to organize the books and papers. Question 5 with 2 blanksIt is eleven at night; I can't go to the library now because. Question 6 with 2 blanks My uncle's car very because of the snow and mud (mud) that there is this week. Question 7 with 2 blanks My dad sings at home when. Question 8 with 2 blanksAlberto because his friends are far away. Question 9 with 2 blanksThe windows because the weather is good.
8 0
3 years ago
These are not multiple choice
TiliK225 [7]

Answer: Written by the wonderfully named Munro Leaf and lovingly illustrated in black and white by Robert Lawson, The Story of Ferdinand, set in Spain, was first published in 1936, the same year that the Spanish Civil War (the subject of my first novel, The Poet’s Wife!) truly erupted.  Due to the sensitive timing of the book’s publication, at a time when fascism was rapidly spreading across Europe, Ferdinand, a gentle bull who prefers smelling flowers to bullfighting, caused considerable controversy as he was believed to represent a left-wing pacifist. Not only was the book burned as propaganda in Nazi Germany but it was also banned outright in Spain, a country embroiled in bitter civil war and edging further and further to the political right. The controversy continued, for Stalin granted it privileged in status in communist Russia whilst over in India, Ferdinand was said to number amongst Mahatma Gandhi’s favourite books. Yet it matters not how many times Ferdinand was burned or banned, this book has been translated into over sixty languages and has never once gone out of print. When Leaf created this story (which he apparently wrote in a single sitting in a yellow legal pad so his friend Lawson would have something to illustrate), did he intend a subtle dig at the rise of fascism in Europe? He claims not; that he simply wanted to write something to entertain children. And reading it now, as I often do to my children, I must admit it is hard to understand what the fuss was once all about.

Ferdinand is a gentle soul who enjoys nothing more than sitting quietly and alone beneath his favourite cork tree all day. All the other little bulls he lived with would run and jump and butt their heads together, but not Ferdinand. He liked to sit just quietly and smell the flowers. When five men arrive at the pasture one day to find the toughest bull to fight in the ring in Madrid, whilst all the other bulls do their best to win the men over, unfortunately for Ferdinand, he doesn’t look where he’s sitting and places his behind firmly on a bee (above picture.) Ferdinand jumped up with a snort. He ran around puffing and snorting, butting and pawing the ground as if he were crazy.

The unwitting Ferdiand gets picked and is carted off to Madrid where he is called Ferdinand the Fierce, everybody quaking in their boots at the imminent arrival of this terrifying beast in the bullring. Ferdinand enters the bullring in something of a daze whilst the crowd clap and cheer, waiting for him to fiercely fight. But Ferdinand has other ideas. He has caught a scent of the flowers in the hair of all the lovely ladies, and he cannot quite help himself but sit down quietly and smell. Nothing that the matador does to try to provoke him entices him to fight. Oh no. He wouldn’t fight and be fierce no matter what they did. He just sat and smelled. And the Banderilleros were mad and the Picadores were madder and the Matador was so mad he cried because he couldn’t show off with his cape and sword.

Happily for Ferdinand, and unhappily for the Matador and bull-fighting fans, the gentle bull gets taken home to his pasture.

Explanation:

Hope this helps

8 0
3 years ago
Estoy tan aburrido!! quien quiere hablar?????
Crazy boy [7]

Answer:

English traslation:

I'm so bored!! who wants to talk?        

Explanation:

...                                  

6 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Match the following.
Zigmanuir [339]
Pongo detergente en la lavadora 
la alfombra esta muy sucia. la criada pasara la aspiradora
cuando estoy en la cosina me lavo las manos en el fregadero
me lavo  en la banera
hay sabanas limpias en la cama 
pongo la basura en el basurero 
uso el cortacesped para cortar el cesped
preparo la comida en la cicina
uso la secadora para secar la ropa
3 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
What is funny about the use of the phrase "Not a peep. Ni a palabra!" in this passage?
Natali [406]

Answer:

Now Sancho tells it to bolsa!

Explanation:

3 0
3 years ago
Other questions:
  • Selecciona la respuesta correcta.
    11·2 answers
  • Enviamos el paquete a mi tía desde ________________.
    15·2 answers
  • Carlos había escrito un correo eléctronico.
    6·1 answer
  • Make a sentence with thin and tin​
    10·2 answers
  • Anyone know fluent Spanish and goes to k12 I need help with some writing test but the translation have to be simple for it to no
    15·1 answer
  • Cuales han sido sus precupaciones y a Qué parte de la sociedad Mexicana representa
    14·1 answer
  • A. Use of Subjunctive After Nonexisting and indefinite Antecedents
    8·1 answer
  • Conjugate the verbs in the Preterite Tense.
    9·1 answer
  • SAVANZAT
    12·2 answers
  • Las futuras generaciones / no estar afectadas por nuestros errores.
    14·2 answers
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!