Answer:
Tomorrow my family and I (to go) to the Manuel Antonio National Park.
Explanation:
(Un suéter ) because obviously you won’t wear short pants or a raincoat if your cold in spring
<h2>Answer:</h2>
LETI: Cuando tenga 30 años seré una arqueóloga famosa. Para entonces, habré descubierto unas ruinas indígenas muy importantes.
SERGIO: Yo tendré un programa de viajes en la televisión. Mi cámara de video y yo visitaremos lugares hermosos y muy interesantes.
SUSI: Entonces vendrás a visitarme a mi restaurante de comida caribeña que abriré en Santo Domingo, ¿verdad? El Sabor Dominicano tendrá los mejores platos tradicionales y otros creados por mí.
SERGIO: Claro que sí, iré a comer las especialidades y lo recomendaré a mis telespectadores. También podremos visitar a Leti en sus expediciones.
<h2>Explanation:</h2>
This lesson stands for the future tense. In Spanish, a common tense in future is the simple future that is used to talk about what <em>will</em> or<em> shall</em> happen. Also, it talks about the possibility of what someone may or might be doing in the present. So:
- Seré (conjugated for the first person singular) comes from the verb ser.
- Habré (conjugated for the first person singular) comes from the verb haber
- Tendré (conjugated for the first person singular) comes from the verb tener
- Visitaremos (conjugated for the first person plural) comes from the verb visitar
- Vendrás (conjugated for the second person singular in informal form - tú) comes from the verb venir
- Abriré (conjugated for the first person singular) come from the verb abrir
- Tendrá (conjugated for the third person singular) comes from the verb tener
- Iré (conjugated for the first person singular) comes from the verb ir
- Recomendaré (conjugated for the first person singular) comes from the verb recomendar
- Podremos (conjugated for the first person plural) comes from the verb poder.
Answer:
Nosotros barremos el suelo "we sweep the floor."
Explanation:
Prendemos would mean "we light the ground," sacuden would mean "we shake the ground," and barren is the incorect verb form. Barren is used for ustedes, and in this situation we are reffering to ourselves and not somebody else.