No lavarse la boca y comer mucho dulce
Answer:
Both. Depends on the situation.
Explanation:
"Ti" would be you as the object. Mainly after prepositions, "ti" is always used (por ti, para ti, a ti, etc.). "Te" is also for a direct/indirect object and is used when there's no preposition.
Answer:
He is ugly.
• She is beautiful.
• We are angry.
• They are thirsty.
• I am handsome.
• You are slim.
Explanation:
Imagine a red, arid, hot land. With geysers spitting into a dark sky and plummeting in the colder areas. In the hottest there is only lava. There's nothing that looks like a plant. Not even moss. Of course not, because life still doesn't exist. There's only stuff. Minerals, molecules, inert matter,... In a nearby pond, next to a brown rock, something moves inside. But we can't see them so they're molecules, so small they're indistinguishable from the liquid where they are. Suddenly, heat, movement, other molecules or mixing this, along with a little luck, mark the beginning of something completely new; the first germ of the origin of life is growing. • Extract six qualifying adjectives from the text, write them down and set them.
Answer:
Sun: Hace calor, Hace sol
Snowflake: Hace frio, llueve nieva, Hiela
Fall leaf: Esta fresco, esta nublado
Flower:
im stuck on flower though, i speak perfect spanish but i just dont get this
Explanation:
I believe your answer is chocolate baroque