Termina cada oración de una forma apropiada poniendo el verbo en el subjuntivo o el indicativo según el contexto. ¡OJO! No uses ninguno de los verbos más de una vez.
conocer dar divorciarse hablar ir participar
Es necesario que los padres _____________________________mucho apoyo a sus hijos.
den
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Complete lo siguiente, usando el presente de indicativo, el presente de subjuntivo o el infinitivo de los verbos dados.
Espero ______________ (terminar) el trabajo antes de que mi jefe ______________ (volver) a la oficina.
Conversación Choose the correct word to complete this conversation.
—Buenos días, ¿en qué puedo (1. quedarle / servirle / necesita) _________________? —Buenos días. Busco un (2. vestido / traje de baño / guante) _________________ para ir a una fiesta. —Yo puedo ayudarle. ¿Qué le parece este? Es muy bonito y está rebajado. Es de buena (3. cadena / raya/ calidad) ____________________. —Sí, me gusta. —¿Cuál es su (4. talla / color / bufanda) ____________________? —Mediana. ¿Lo tiene en rojo? —Por supuesto. —¡Me gusta! Me lo voy a probar. […] —Me (5. gusta / queda / lleva) _____________________ muy bien. Me lo llevo. —Muy bien. ¿Cómo desea (6. pagar / ordenar / salir) ____________________? —Con (7. efectivo / cheque / tarjeta) __________________ de crédito.
Consider the following sentence: Danny, the head of our student council, is a brilliant speaker. Which of the following is the appositive of that sentence?
a. Danny b. the head of our student council c. a brilliant speaker d. the head of
Edit the following passage. Correct any errors in capitalization, spelling, and punctuation. Divide the passage into paragraphs. Make only essential changes.
When my husband Joe had major surgery five years ago, each of his family members responded just as I knew they would. John, his father, decided to organize the family’s calls. Because, of course, everything would run so much more smoothly. Thus Jane, Matt, and Jim recieved detailed sheets of instructions in the mail. Telling them which days to telephone r.j. smith hospital to talk to Joe and what presents to send. Jane, enraged, promptly threw a tantrum. Calling Matt and me to complain about her father’s overbearing behavior. “I,” she yelled, “am a Psychiatrist who knows how to handle these situations, i am not still a child.” Matt also responded predictably. By avoiding the situation. He threw himself into his work. Normally a late sleeper, Matt took to leaving at 5:00 a.m., driving on the deserted expressway and arriving at work before six a.m. In addition, he didn’t return until 11:00 p.m. When he would fall into bed so exhausted that he couldn’t worry about Joe. Jim, too, responded predictably. He fumed inside for weeks, ignored John’s instructions, and sent cartons of books to Joe. So that he would never be bored. The books were funny. Because Jim had read Norman Cousins’ book about the healing power of laughter. Within a few months, Joe recovered from the surgery-in spite of his family.