Answer
In Spanish, adjectives must agree with the noun they describe in gender and in number. This means that if the noun an adjective describes is feminine, the adjective must be feminine, and if that same noun is also plural, the adjective will be feminine AND plural
The answer is 8 en punto I think.
Answer:
Yo trabajo en McDonalds
Explanation:
It means "I work in McDonalds" instead of "Do you work in McDonalds?".
i'm assuming that's what you meant by opposite lol
When it asks for preterite, they only want to change the tense of the verb.
The conjugation of conocer / conozco in preterite terms <u>IN YO FORM</u> is
conocí
meaning "I knew"
Èl es muy alto y fuerte.
Ella no está en el hospital.
El restaurante recibe el vino.
Tu eres bonita.