The sentence says “ I never had to accept this job before.” Trabajo is a noun. If you are trying to say, “ I never had to work before ”, then It would be “trabajar” because it is after the verb “había”.
What’s the list? El cole means “the school” by the way
Christmas in Spanish is “Navidad”
<span>mochila is feminine, thus, la for singular, las for plural so if it is a definite article, and una or unas if it is indefinite article.</span>
Answer:
Ellos / ellas / ustedes = traerían
Tú = Mirarías
Yo / él / ella /usted = comería
Nosotros = iríamos
Explanation:
Ellos (they-masculine) / ellas (they-femenine) / ustedes (you-plural): is used for two or more people, the ending "ían" is always for two or more people.
Tú (you): you, a single person, "ías" is always for the person you are talking to.
Yo (I) // él (he - him) // ella (she - her) // usted (you-politely): all of them are used with the ending "ía". "Usted" is used if you talk to an older person, and you finish verbs as if you where talking to them in third person.
Nosotros (we-us): always ending with "íamos"