GRAMÁTICA. Using the future tense, write four sentences describing what you will do before next year.

1.
2.
3.
4.


Answers will vary.

Language Arts & World Languages

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Answer the following questions by choosing the correct negative expression in parentheses.

—Mangi qualcosa? —No, non mangio___________________________________. (niente, nemmeno)

Language Arts & World Languages

Un día en el consultorio.  Hoy visitas a tu tía Amelia, una médica que trabaja en el hospital central. En tu visita, escuchas cómo tu tía y los enfermeros hablan sobre los diagnósticos y tratamientos de sus pacientes. Completa cada oración con la palabra lógica de la lista. jarabe / antibiótico / yeso / resfriado / paracetamol / infección  1. El señor Achim tiene mucho dolor de cabeza desde ayer; necesita tomar (1) ________________________ tres veces por día.2. Los hijos de la señora Juárez estornudan (sneeze) y tienen un poco de fiebre. Ellos seguramente tienen un (2) _____________________________________. Deben guardar cama dos días.3. El joven Guillermo Cortés se cayó mientras jugaba fútbol y se rompió el brazo derecho. Tenemos que ponerle un (3)

__________________________ ya mismo (right away). 4. La señora Posse se cortó la mano con un cuchillo y tiene una (4) ________________________. Debe tomar este (5) ____________________________ cada ocho horas, por dos semanas. 5. Carlitos tiene una tos muy fuerte. Debe tomar una cucharada de (6) ____________________ cada seis horas.(4) Fill in the blank(s) with the appropriate word(s).

Language Arts & World Languages

Read the essay below and then answer the questions about coherence that follow.

Labeling Animals a In some ways, the human race seems to be in its childhood. The conventional attitude toward animals, for example, makes humanity seem like a tribe of seven-year-olds pulling the wings off flies. Instead of respecting all animals as important parts of the chain of life, humans rate them according to their usefulness. Historically, humankind has failed to recognize animals as anything other than products, toys, or monsters. b There are the products. These are the animals, such as cattle, pigs, and sheep, that provide much of the world’s food. For this reason, people tend to think of them less as living creatures than as growing crops, fattening them up, herding them into slaughterhouses, and carving them into edible portions. These animals are “useful,” so the general population has typically positive feelings about them. Humankind’s actions show that most people are not actually fond of them. People are willing to lock baby calves into dark boxes for months and then kill them for veal, or cram thousands of chickens into tiny pens and allow them to live for only six weeks. Increased production, not humane treatment, is the bottom line. c Perhaps the most harmful label that humans pin on animals, though, is that of monster. The general population has use at all for these creatures. They are taught from birth that sharks, snakes, bats, and alligators, for instance, are evil and dangerous. The facts about these animals make no difference to people’s emotions. The fact that being attacked by a shark is less likely than being struck by lightning does not stop fishermen from holding shark-killing contests. The fact that a snake is harmless does not stop sadistic hikers from crushing it. Very few will ever be mauled by a grizzly or bobcat or torn apart by wolves, yet many support the extermination of these animals in the name of “safety.” d Advertisers label some animals as toys. These are the lucky ones—the puppies, kittens, pandas, koala bears, bunnies, and porpoises that children consider cute. Toys make people feel sentimental and protective. Many are willing to devote five minutes on the evening news to a baby panda, they stock their children’s room with stuffed bunnies, and watch movies about friendly, funny porpoises. No one in their right mind would advocate a puppy-shoot or a koala-killing contest. Toy-like animals may occasionally be neglected or abused by individual owners, but polite society does not allow them to be destroyed on a wholesale basis. e Labeling animals is not a harmless little quirk that humans have. In separating the animal kingdom into products, toys, and monsters, society has made it easier to brutalize these defenseless creatures. The practice of categorizing has dulled humanity’s respect for other living beings and even led to the destruction of entire species. As people dominate animals, they forget to behave as caretakers. This results in a loss of dignity and humanity—not only for the victimized animals, but for their human counterparts as well. 1. What are the first several words of the sentence to which the transition word First could be added in the first supporting paragraph? _____________________________ 2. What are the first several words of the sentence to which the transition word However could be added in the first supporting paragraph? _____________________________ 3. What word is a synonym for animals in the second supporting paragraph? ______________ 4. To what does the pronoun them refer in the third supporting paragraph? _________________ 5. The emphatic order of the three supporting paragraphs is confused. Which supporting paragraph should come first? _____ Second? _____ Third? _____

Language Arts & World Languages

In describing how the brain works, cognitive psychologists use the analogy of how the brain works and

A) how the engine in an automobile keeps the automobile running. B) how the recorder on a telephone can receive messages when the phone isn’t answered. C) the workings of the central processing unit of a computer.

Language Arts & World Languages