Answer:
there are a lot of similarities between greetings in the US and in Latin America, as probably the most common greeting is "¿hola, qué tal? " which means "hi, what's up".
It can actually be "strengthened" into "¿hola, qué tal?¿cómo estás? "- which repeats the question of "how are you" twice in two different ways -in fact, which was the most common greeting I heard in Mexico.
Some regions in Latin America also have their own, special greeting, for example in Mexico you an also hear ¿qué onda? which is no heard in other places (it literally means "what a wave"! or "what is the wave bringing"
Explanation:
The only things I can think of are car and ray
Answer:
Meine Eltern bewundern den Stil von Gustav Klimt.
Explanation:
bewundern - 3. Person, Plural
Meine Eltern - My parents
Bonjour !!
<em>METTRE AU NÉGATIF</em>
a- Il n'est pas très intelligent.
b- Ce n'est pas une cravate bleue.
c- Elle n'a pas une grande maison.
d- L'ami de David ne mange pas de salade.
e- Le fils de mon père n'est pas mon frère.
f- Vous ne prenez pas de frites.
g- Nous ne voulons pas d'eau minérale.
h- Je ne suis pas américain.
i- Elles n'aiment pas les chocolats.
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<u><em>EXPLANATION</em></u>
The negative form = subject + ne + verb + pas + ....
If the noun after ne begins with a vowel, <em>ne </em><em>changes in</em><em> n'</em><em>....</em>
the partitive articles "de la, du, de l', des" change into "de" in negative form with "ne... pas"
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hope this helps ☺☺☺