Answer:
An airport terminal is a very busy place. With many passengers coming in and many others leaving, there is a constant movement of both people and planes. After clearing the security check the passengers head to the waiting area. It is this area of the airport that allows a clear picture of the runway.
Please give me brainliest - you get 25% as well! I swear!
hey guys please solve it
Answer:
[tex]\fbox {1) C. Nagpur}[/tex]
[tex]\fbox {2) A. P Kunjilal Dubey}[/tex]
[tex]\fbox {3) A. Indore}[/tex]
[tex]\fbox {4) A. Narmada puram}[/tex]
[tex]\fbox {5) A. Rewa}[/tex]
Explanation:
[tex]\textsf {1) Nagpur was not added in Madhya Pradesh in 1956.}[/tex]
[tex]\textsf {2) P. Kunjilal Dubey was the first Vidhan Sabha speaker in M.P.}[/tex]
[tex]\textsf {3) Indore is considered the business capital of Madhya Pradesh.}[/tex]
[tex]\textsf {4) Tawa canal is present in Narmada puram.}[/tex]
[tex]\textsf {5) In Asia 150 mega ultra solar plant is in Rewa.}[/tex]
WILL MARK BRAINLIEST, 20 POINTS
José y Pedro van a __________esa canción.
canta
cantamos
cantan
cantar
I know that cantar is the correct answer, but why? Why isn't it cantan? Jose y Pedro is basically ellos, so I'm confused why the answer is not cantan, which is the ellos conjugation of cantar. Please answer in terms a Spanish II student can understand.
José y Pedro van a cantar esa canción.
[tex] \boxed{ \bold{Explanation}}[/tex]
It is written "cantar" in the infinitive, because it is a verbal periphrasis. A verbal periphrasis is two verbs that form the core of a predicate. The verbal periphrasis must have:
Verb (Conjugated) + Preposition (Optional) + Verb (impersonal form). In this case the paraphrase is:[tex] \overbrace {\text{van}}^{verb} \: \overbrace {\text{a}}^{preposition} \: \overbrace {\text{cantar}}^{verb} [/tex]
If it wasn't a verbal periphrasis, it could have been "cantan" (the tense would have to be present).
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