Answer:
1. - Hasta mañana, señora Ramírez. Saludos al señor Ramírez. <em>¿Cómo está el?</em>
- Muy bien, gracias.
Explanation:
The second part is a response of Mrs. Ramirez to her speaker, the answer "Muy bien, gracias" is the Spanish of the typical answer "He is fine, thanks", which is the typical response of the question "How is he?" (¿Como está el?)
Therefore, the dialog must be written as follows:
1. - Hasta mañana, señora Ramírez. Saludos al señor Ramírez. <em>¿Cómo está el?</em>
- Muy bien, gracias.
Answer:
1. cierto
2. falso
3. cierto
4. falso
5. falso
6. cierto
Explanation:
You must say if it is true or false
1. Jorge is always resting or sleeping.
2. Gonzalo never looks out the window.
3. Jorge and Gonzalo have a very different personality.
4. Jennifer Lopez is walking on the street.
5. Susana and Jorge get along very well.
6. The Argentine boy on the third floor always fought with Susana. true False
Did you read a book? These questions are about a book. Maybe give me the link to the book and then ill help. :p
Estamos insertos en deportes, películas, libros, videojuegos y programas de televisión. No nos interesan las tareas ni otras tareas escolares.
English Translation:
We Are Insterted In Sports, Movies, Books, Video Games And Tv Show. We Are Not Intersted In, Homework And Other School Assignments.
Answer:
1. me encanta
2. me preocupan
3. me disgusta
4. me gusta
5. me caen
6. me preocupa
7. me gusta
Explanation:
The exercise aims for you to complete the conversation with pronominal verbs. A pronominal verb is the one that uses reflexive pronouns (me, te, se, nos, os, se), it is usually an intransitive verb (it has no object). The reflexive pronoun is used to change the meaning of the verb, accentuate the action or indicate that the action directly affects the subject.
English doesn’t have pronominal verbs per se. We can translate Me estoy lavando as "I’m washing myself," but we’re far more likely to say "I’m washing" – the fact that it’s myself is implicitly understood. This is not the case in Spanish. If you’re washing yourself, you need the reflexive pronoun, because without it, you’re automatically saying that you’re washing someone else.
What sets pronominal verbs apart from non-pronominal verbs is that pronominals must be conjugated with a reflexive pronoun, which always agrees with the subject. Like object pronouns, the reflexive pronoun is placed directly in front of the verb. Unlike subject pronouns, the reflexive pronoun is required in Spanish.