Ive ecountered a lot of spanish speaking people in schools also in many art coffee shops. You wont see a lot of them at places like that. even more at coffee shops
1. como quiere su cafe? ( how would you like your coffee)
2. yo lo quiero muy negro sin nada ( i like my coffee black with nothing in it)
hoped that helped :)
it is a.
Explanation:
i asked my friend who speaks spanish-
Los conectores eléctricos se clasifican en tres tipos según sus extremos de terminación: conectores de placa a placa, conectores de cable/cable a cable/cable y conectores de cable/cable a placa.
Hope this helps
The key to finding the correct descriptor of Yolanda is to pay attention to gender. <em>Yolanda</em> is a feminine name, thus the adjective used to describe someone named <em>Yolanda</em> (presumably a female) in Spanish would take a feminine form.
<u>The options</u>
A. <em>reservad</em><em>o</em> - reserved ~masc. singular
B. <em>impacient</em><em>e</em> - impatient ~neither feminine nor masculine; singular
C. <em>trabajad</em><em>or</em> - worker ~masc. singular
D. <em>simpátic</em><em>o</em> - nice ~masc. singular
Only one of these adjectives is neutral, while all others contain masculine conjugations. Our correct answer is clear.
<h3>
Answer:</h3>
B. <em>impaciente</em>