Answer:
1. This is my car (Este es mi gato.)
2.Este libro es mío. (This book is mine.)
3. La culpa es mía. (The fault is mine.)
4. Ellos son amigos míos. (They are friends of mine.)
5. Esas muñecas no son mías. (Those dolls are not mine.)
6. ¿Ese es tu hermano? (That’s your brother?)
7. No encuentro tus libros. (I can’t find your books.)
8. No es asunto tuyo. (It is none of your business.)
9. ¿Es tuya esta bufanda? (Is this scarf yours?)
10. Mis hermanos y los tuyos fueron al mismo colegio. (My brothers and yours went to the same school.)
11. Espero noticias tuyas. (I hope to hear from you.)
Explanation:
I hope I helped!!
Answer:
D. In what ways did the previous restaurant inspire you to take on this new project?
(I took the test) (:
The author includes logical evidence that Indian workers and formerly enslaved people didn't get along because wages went down.
In the passage, it states:
"The Indian coolies and the ex-slaves, who resented the newcomers flooding the colonies and driving down wages, were instant rivals."
In this case, the Indian coolies are the newcomers and the ex-slaves are the ones resenting them. Therefore, the ex-slaves resent the Indian coolies because they were driving down wages.
Perfect
tenses serves a portraying the verb or the action word as something that
already happened or is completed, thus the term ‘perfect’. If it is present
perfect tense, it means that the action was already done relatively to the
present (has/have with past participle). If it is past perfect tense, action is
already finished relatively to the past (had with past participle and if it is
future perfect tense, action is complete relatively to the future (will have
with past participle).
<span>
The
answer is letter D: past participle</span>
I need a bit more details on what passage you are reading. I have read plenty of stories, articles, and fiction books with characters by the name of Phillip.
Sorry but hopefully you can supply more details :/