Answer:
¡Sí lo son!
Explanation:
English translation to
¡Sí lo son! : Yes, they are!
Se va quedar <span>en un lugar que no cuesta mucho para poder tener más dinero en las excursiones</span>
Answer : Nosotros ya hemos hecho un viaje al Carnaval en Brasil y planeamos hacer otro viaje para ir al Carnaval de Barranquilla.
Translation: We have already made a trip to the Carnival in Brazil and we plan to make another trip to go to the Carnival in Barranquilla.
Explanation: The correct tense in Spanish is the perfect preterite, because it is used to describe actions completed in the past that have an effect on the present or the future. According to the text read, we describe the Brazilian Carnival, because we already know it and we describe it in the present, because it is a recent past and the effect on the future is that we plan to make another trip in the future to another Carnival in Barranquilla. The perfect preterite in Spanish is formed with the auxiliary verb "haber" in present tense conjugated with the subject of the sentence and the participle of the main verb and is equivalent more or less to the present perfect in English.
In summary: Present Perfect English is equivalent more or less to "Pretérito perfecto compuesto" in Spanish.
Answer:
paguete
Explanation:
The English translation is: good afternoon, are you Miss Ramirez? I bring you a paguete
Answer:Three cultures converge here: Aztec, Spanish, and contemporary Mexican. Surrounded by modern office and apartment buildings are large remains of the Aztec city of Tlatelolco, site of the last battle of the conquest of Mexico. To one side is the Church of Santiago.
The Plaza de las Tres Culturas ("Square of the Three Cultures") is the main square within the Tlatelolco neighborhood of Mexico City. The name "<u><em>Three Cultures" is in recognition of the three periods of Mexican history reflected by buildings in the plaza: pre-Columbian, Spanish colonial, and the independent nation. The plaza, designed by Mexican architect and urbanist Mario Pani, was completed in 1966.The square contains the archaeological site of the city-state of Tlatelolco and is flanked by the oldest European school of higher learning in the Americas called the College of Santa Cruz de Tlatelolco (built in 1536 by friar Juan de Torquemada and by a massive housing complex built in 1964.</em></u>
Explanation: