Corral EVERYBODY KNOWS THAT.........................................
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But You OBVIOUSLY!
it's not a complete sentence, but the part you have is 'would like to be in the..'
Enclosure in Spanish is: recinto, cercado.
Yes, it is. It translates to "[understood subject] is tall." the understood subject is either He, She, It or You (formal) (El/Ella/Usted)
English: EnclosuresSpanish: Recintos
He bought, I buy, buy. Depends on the complete sentence.
"Oración" is a Spanish word that can mean "prayer" or "sentence" depending on the context.
Answer: CREO or CREÍAExplanation: The sentence at current is "I ______ that the concert was very good." Naturally, the blank is the verb to "think" or "believe". It is proper grammar in Spanish to use the verb "creer", meaning to believe, in this type of sentence (instead of "pensar", meaning to think). You then need to conjugate "creer" for the "yo" form, which is "creo" in the present tense or "creía" in the imperfect. The difference in meaning is "I think that concert was very good" vs. "I thought that the concert was very good".
A compound sentence is a sentence with more than one subject or predicate, an example would be I tried to speak English, and my friend tried to speak Spanish.
A compound sentence is a sentence with more than one subject or predicate, an example would be I tried to speak English, and my friend tried to speak Spanish.
It means "stations". You will notice that in Spanish, words starting with "st", "sp", or "sc" don't exist - they always lead with the "e", such as "estación", "escuela", "especial". This is a serious pronunciation issues for native Spanish speakers when they try to learn English - you will hear them say "estation", "eschool", and "especial".
That is nonsense. It has no meaning in Spanish.
In things like this, it is much better to present a complete sentence rather than a phrase. "It is expensive, but worth it" would be "Es caro, pero vale la pena". This is an idiomatic expression literally meaning "worth the pain".