QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- laura, la de carlos, es la de marisol.
This appears to be a Spanish fill - in - the - blank question related to family relationships (a common topic in language learning, which falls under the Arts discipline's subfield of Languages, specifically Spanish language learning). To solve this, we need to consider common family relationship terms in Spanish.
Step 1: Analyze the first blank (relationship between Laura and Carlos)
Common female relationship terms from a person (Carlos) could be "hermana" (sister), "esposa" (wife), "hija" (daughter) etc. Let's assume a common family structure. If we take "hermana" (sister) for the first blank, then we need to find the relationship between Laura and Marisol.
Step 2: Analyze the second blank (relationship between Laura and Marisol)
If Laura is the "hermana" (sister) of Carlos, and if Marisol has a relationship with Laura, for example, if Laura is the "amiga" (friend) or another family relation. But a more consistent family relation: if Carlos and Marisol are related, say Carlos is the brother of Marisol, then Laura (sister of Carlos) would be the "hermana" of Marisol as well, or if Carlos is the husband of Marisol, then Laura (sister of Carlos) would be the "cuñada" (sister - in - law) of Marisol.
A common and simple answer:
First blank: "hermana" (sister)
Second blank: "amiga" (friend) or a family relation. But a more typical family - based answer:
If we consider a simple sibling relationship, first blank: "hermana", second blank: "hermana" (if Carlos and Marisol are siblings) or if Carlos is married to Marisol, first blank: "hermana", second blank: "cuñada".
A very common and basic answer for beginners:
First blank: "hermana"
Second blank: "amiga"
But a more accurate family - centric answer (assuming Carlos and Marisol are married):
First blank: "hermana"
Second blank: "cuñada"
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First blank: hermana
Second blank: cuñada (or other appropriate relationship terms like hermana, amiga depending on the context assumed)