ser (more permanent, character, nature): soy/eres/es/somos/sois/son
estar (temporary, fleeting): estoy/estas/esta/estamos/estais/estan
'soy feliz', means 'I'm happy by nature';
'estoy feliz' means 'I'm happy at the moment', e.g. because I've received a gift.
2: a verb and a noun.
Noun and predicate or verb
"Hacer" is the Spanish verb meaning "to make" or "to do".
In the sentence "Wow! The Spanish club traveled to Madrid, Spain this summer," the parts of speech include interjection ("Wow"), noun ("club," "Madrid," "Spain," "summer"), adjective ("Spanish"), verb ("traveled"), and preposition ("to"). The interjection expresses emotion, while the nouns serve as the subjects and objects. The adjective describes the noun, and the verb indicates the action. The preposition connects the verb to its object.
The verb "necesitar" in Spanish means "to need."
This is really a combination of a verb and an adjective in both languages. In English, this is the verb "to be" plus the modifier "full". In Spanish, this is the verb "estar" and the adjective "lleno/a". So "to be full" in Spanish is "Estar lleno/a". The related Spanish verb "llenar" means "to fill".
as far as I know, there is no chaver verb in spanish ...check the spelling
The verb in Spanish for "to go" is "ir". It is an EXTREMELY irregular verb, and most of the conjugations look noting like the base verb.
Dando - from the verb Dar -to give
No. Estudiar is a regular verb in Spanish. When conjugating this verb it follows all the rules for -ar verbs.
The verb "to love" in Spanish is "amar".
"Impresionar" is the Spanish verb "to impress". "Impresionado" is the form of this verb that corresponds to "impressed".