There are two possibilities:
(i) 'ser' = 'to be', relating to innate or more permanent states
(ii) 'estar' = 'to be' relating to more-transient states (location, feeling, etc.)
'Are' - as in 'you are', 'we are', 'they are' varies as foillows:
(i) 'sois/son', 'somos', son' ('you' informal/formal plural; we; they)
(ii) 'estais/estan', 'estamos', 'estan' (as above)
Examples:
'Sois ingleses, verdad?' (You are English, right?); 'Si, somos ingleses' (Yes, we are English); 'Son ingleses.' (They are English)
'Estais en el tren?' (Are you on the train?); 'Si, estamos' (Yes, we are); 'Estan en el tren' (They are on the train).
In polite form, you ask "Como esta usted?". Familiarly, it is "Como estas?" Both of these questions are translated as "How are you?". The word "doing" is not used in these cases.
'van'. The Spanish equivalent to the present progressive (am/is/are ....ing) is used less than in English
Estamos calientes or Nosotros somos calientes.
We are good (meaning behaving or having talent) Somos buenos.
We are good (we are well) Estamos bien.
Como estas?
haciendo
Lo estoy haciendo.
Hola, que tal?
Qué estás haciendo esta semana?
hi laly its hilda good after noon how is you daughter and you doing
how do you spell lemon in spanish
parece that is how you spell seems in spanish
"con" I think "con" is how you spell with in spanish.
flaco is how you spell skinny is spanish.
Heck with Spanish - can you spell it in English?
"Thursday" in Spanish is "jueves". It is not capitalized.
If you are asking how the word "spanish" is spelled, it would be Spanish. "How do you spell" in spanish is "¿Cómo se deletrea...?"