The five sentences using the Preterite Tense are:
- <em>El mes pasado</em>, mi hermana <u>bebió</u> dos litros de agua al día.
- Yo <u>comprendí</u> los ejercicios de matemáticas hasta <em>la semana pasada</em>.
- Mis abuelos <u>aprendieron</u> a usar una red social <em>el mes pasado</em>.
- El jugador de futbol <u>vivió</u> en Italia <em>el mes pasado</em>.
- Los vecinos <u>escribieron</u> una carta para el ayuntamiento la semana pasada.
Translation.
- <em>Last month</em>, my sister <u>drank</u> two liters of water a day.
- I <u>understood</u> the math exercises until <em>last week</em>.
- My grandparents <u>learned</u> to use a social network <em>last month</em>.
- The soccer player <u>lived</u> in Italy <em>last month</em>.
- Neighbors <u>wrote</u> a letter to the city council <em>last week</em>.
<em>Conjugation of verbs in the </em><em>Preterite Tense</em>.
In Spanish, verbs conjugated in the <em>preterite tense</em> regularly have an accent mark when accompanied by a noun that corresponds to the first or third person. The following is the way in which it most usually ends, taking into account the personal pronoun used:
- <em>Yo</em><em>:</em> The verb in the preterite tense usually ends in "é, í".
- <em>Tú</em><em>:</em> The verb in the preterite tense usually ends in "aste, iste".
- <em>Usted / Él / Ella</em><em>:</em> The verb in the preterite tense usually ends in "ó".
- <em>Nosotros / Nosotras</em><em>: </em>The verb in the preterite tense usually ends in "amos, imos".
- <em>Ustedes / Ellos / Ellas</em><em>: </em>The verb in the preterite tense usually ends in "ieron".
<em>Fulfillment of requests</em>.
The sentences made fully comply with activities that occurred <u><em>last week or last month</em></u>. The three regular verbs ending in ER used were: beb<u>er</u>, entend<u>er</u>, and aprend<u>er</u>. On the other hand, the two regular verbs ending in IR used were: viv<u>ir</u> and escrib<u>ir</u>.
More information:
brainly.com/question/75?referrer=searchResults
I am not sure what I am supposed to answer.
I can tell you which answers make sense.
23 makes sense.
24 I would change "tus" for "las" which means "the".
25 makes sense.
Answer:
thats not the correct answer, I belive it is 'son, estas"
Explanation:
I hope this good if not please let me know
1.d
2.a
3.c
Those are the answers trust me
- Hospedar
- Dar posada
- Dar para donde vivir
- Aposentar
All those words are <u>synonyms</u> of "alojar" (lodge).
If two words are synonyms, they have a <u>similar meaning</u>.
<h3><em><u>MissSpanish</u></em></h3>