It is perhaps clearer in other languages, but conjugated verbs in English<span> can also sometimes tell us something about how many people are participating in the action of the </span>verb<span>. For example, singular subjects (he, she, it) in the present simple tense have an “s” added to them when </span>conjugated<span>: He sings. She reads.</span>
Question 1 : A ti Te Gustan Los Dias de Fiesta
Question 2 : A Ellos les gusta Mucho la familia
hope this helps
Answer:
I belive the answer is "Soy bastante malo.
Hay un restaurante, pero la comida es mala.
¡Qué pena! No es bueno para mí pasar las vacaciones en un hotel tan malo."
Explanation:
i'm only on my second course in Spanish so I would translate it first before submitting.
Hacemos, bailaré, those are your future verbs