QUESTION IMAGE
Question
select the correct answer.
which form of the verb comer correctly completes this conversation?
patricia: ¿qué más tengo que hacer?
doctor: ______ más frutas.
a. coma
b. comen
c. comes
d. como
This is a Spanish grammar question about the subjunctive mood (or appropriate verb form in a medical advice context). The doctor is giving advice to Patricia, so we use the subjunctive or the appropriate imperative/form for "you (usted - formal)"? Wait, actually, in Spanish, when a doctor (or someone giving advice) tells a patient to do something, we use the subjunctive or the imperative. Let's analyze the verb "comer" (to eat). The subject here is Patricia (second person singular, formal "usted" maybe? Or informal "tú"? Wait, the doctor is addressing Patricia. Let's check the options:
- A. Coma: This is the subjunctive form for "usted" (formal you) or "él/ella" (he/she) in the present subjunctive. In medical advice, using the subjunctive with "usted" is common (e.g., "Coma más frutas" - "Eat more fruits").
- B. Comen: This is the indicative present for "ellos/ellas" (they) - "they eat". Doesn't fit here (subject is Patricia, singular).
- C. Comes: This is the indicative present for "tú" (informal you) - "you (tú) eat". But in a doctor - patient context, often formal "usted" is used, and "comes" is informal. Also, the structure here is advice, so subjunctive is better.
- D. Como: This is the indicative present for "yo" (I) - "I eat". Doesn't fit.
So the correct form is "Coma" as it's the subjunctive form appropriate for formal advice (doctor to patient, using "usted" implicitly).
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A. Coma