Dientes
teeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeth
There are different dorms of 'tener' because the questions are referring to different people such as you or parents.
These 'tener' phrases compare to the way we express the same ideas in English by meaning the same thing but not translating into the same thing. Take ¿Tienes fr<span>ío? It translates to 'Do you have cold?' but it means 'Are you cold?' in Spanish.</span>
Answer:
your on the wrong topic btw
Explanation:
btw the answer is C
Answer:
1. La camarera te lo sirvió.
2. Isabel nos las trajo a la mesa.
3. Javier me los pidió anoche.
4. El dueño nos la busca.
5. Tu madre me los consigue.
6. ¿Te lo recomendaron Lola y Paco?
Explanation:
It is called a direct object to the function that assumes a syntactic constituent, different from the grammatical subject, which is mandatorily requested by a transitive verb. Also known as a direct complement, its function is related to the accusative case.
In Spanish, the direct object can always be replaced by "la”, “las”, “lo” or “los”.
Importan si y los estados