I know there is ser and estar but I'll just use ser. The Spanish verb "ser" is equivalent to "to be" in English. I'm not really sure if you want Spanish or English so I'll just do English with Spanish. In English you say "I am" which is like the spanish "yo soy". "You are" is like the spanish tú eres. We don't speak formally so there is no usted es. For ella/ él es... We say she/he is. For " nosotros somos" we say "we are". For "ustedes son" we say "they are" and if you're from Spain, "vosotros sois" is "you guys/ you all" in English you say "you are" because it can refer to one person as well as a group of people. You say I am and he/she is because it is only one person. I hope this helped! To be can be used as ser and estar. It doesn't matter what you're talking about. You can say "i am at my house" and "I am American." Which is like "estoy a mi casa" y "soy estadounidense". I hope this helped!
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Como si fuera el signo de igual de las matemáticas.
I know there is ser and estar but I'll just use ser. The Spanish verb "ser" is equivalent to "to be" in English. I'm not really sure if you want Spanish or English so I'll just do English with Spanish. In English you say "I am" which is like the spanish "yo soy". "You are" is like the spanish tú eres. We don't speak formally so there is no usted es. For ella/ él es... We say she/he is. For " nosotros somos" we say "we are". For "ustedes son" we say "they are" and if you're from Spain, "vosotros sois" is "you guys/ you all" in English you say "you are" because it can refer to one person as well as a group of people. You say I am and he/she is because it is only one person. I hope this helped! To be can be used as ser and estar. It doesn't matter what you're talking about. You can say "i am at my house" and "I am American." Which is like "estoy a mi casa" y "soy estadounidense". I hope this helped!
"To be or not to be, that is the question." -king Leare, Shakespeare