Answer:
The root word in unhappy is "happy"
'un' is the prexix
Explanation:
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Hope this helps!
(Mark Logan's as Brainliest) ;)
Your questions is not so clear, but I will try to answer it as I understand it.
I am a native Spanish speaker so you can trust my answer, if there is a problem with it, it is due the missing information in the question, but I think we can work it out for the best.
In Spanish when you want to make any negative setence in any tense we do not use an auxliliary verb as you do in English, we simply add the word:
No before the verb, for example in:
Yo no <u>quería</u> bailar en la fiesta. (I didn´t <u>wan</u>t to dance at the party)
Mi hermana no <u>piensa</u> antes de hablar. (My sister doesn't <u>think</u> before talking)
No me <u>hables</u>, no <u>quiero</u> nada. (Don't <u>talk</u> to me, I <u>want</u> nothing)
In Spanish we Simply use the Negative Adverb:
No
Answer A.
Key words from the question: <span>commuters do not <u>truly </u>experience New York City
Answer A reflects this because it gives a specific example of a commuter coming into the city but going a whole year without actually experiencing a NYC area outside of where s/he may work. </span>