Spelling, punctuation, and accent mark count toward grading….
Spelling, punctuation, and accent mark count toward grading. Misspelled, wrong tense, wrong form of verbal conjugation, article, or preposition (- full points worth). Missing accents from the words you have been exposed to during the chapter, and punctuation–periods, capital letters, upside-down exclamation or question marks–If needed (-1/4 points). Accent Marks Please write me a short message, in parenthesis, next to the word that needs it, for instance: You need to write ¡Mi mamá comprará el juguete mañana para Iván! You will write it like (upside-down exclamation mark) Mi mama (accent on the 2nd a) comprara (accent on the second a) el juguete manana (tilde over the 1st n) para Ivan (accent on a)! Notice that when there is more than one repeated vowel/consonant, I used more details on which vowel/consonant the accent mark was placed–mamá, mañana, etc. Unlike the name “Ivan” which has one accentuated vowel. Directions: You will be given an English prepositional phrase. Your task is to change the English prepositional phrase into a Spanish prepositional phrase as you have learned in Quizlet. To earn full credit, it would be best to use the matching preposition (location words), such as “in, on, at, etc” articles, such as “a,” “an” some,” etc.; and nouns/vocab when answering your task in Spanish. The English prepositional phrase is “below” 1) 2) . (This is a two-word preposition in Spanish). Do not write the whole answer in a single blank. Use one blank for each answer.