That is an objective description?
1. The store at ten (could be said, vamos a la tienda a las diez?) (or without the question mark to make it a demand)
2. And the papers? (I’m assuming “yo” was a typo. If not, then it translates to (“me the papers”, which makes no sense)
3. Not us, the cards.
4. My parents never
5. You pass first?
6. You always the blankets. (There’s some blanks that need to be filled in)
7. Who else is in the matrimony?
That’s all I’m doing mate, I got more work to do myself.
I think is 1 Ana está en Argentina 2 Juan t Roberto están en la clase de matemáticas 3 I don’t know it’s just. Name 4 Elizabeth está en el aeropuerto 5 los estudiantes están en la playa
Answer:
In Spanish, when we want to write a sentence in the future tense, we can use the combination of the verb ir a + infinitive of another verb. This way, we should conjugate only the verb ir, whereas the second verb stays in its original form.
Explanation:
This is how to conjugate the verb IR (to go):
- (yo) voy 1. (nosotros) vamos
- (tú) vas 2. (vosotros) vais
- (él/ella/Usted) va 3. (ellos/ellas/Ustedes) van
- Los camareros van a preparar las mesas. (los camareros = ellos, are third person plural, van)
- Mi mamá y su amiga van a pedir una ensalada. (mi mamá y su amiga = ellas, third person plural, van)
- Mis amigos y yo vamos a pedir un bistec. (mis amigos y yo = nosotros, first person plural, vamos)
- Yo voy a pedir papas fritas también. (yo, first person singular, voy)
- El camarero va a servir la comida. (el camarero = él, third person singular, va)
- Tú vas a pedir la cuenta. (tú, second person singular, vas)