A verb. Not any verb will do, though; it must be a verb for which this form (reflexive form) makes sense.
a verb would come after those words. For example:
yo me voy = I'm going away
yo me acuerdo = I remember
"Yo" means I in Spanish and could be followed by a variety of things,usually though a verb.
The Spanish word for "Chicken" is pollo, pronounced POY-yo. It is where our English word "poultry" comes from.
I do not is no hago in spanish.
I in Spanish is yo.
the way to write "i" in spanish is "yo"I= yo
I = Yo
That is a saying in Spanish instruction for people who constantly use the personal pronound "yo". It is not normally necessary, and marks the person as a novice. ---- I don't really understand if the frase was primarily in English or spanish. but assuming it was in spanish it can mean 2 things: "yo" means "me/I" in spanish, so someone that is a "yo-yo" can mean it a narcissist person that can only think for him/herself. but "yo-yo" it's also a toy (I think in English it's called the same) so, someone that is a "yo-yo" can mean that it is a person that can be easily manipulated like a "yo-yo" or a person that changes humor or personality or ideas, very frequently. Also can be referd as a person, that comes and goes, easily (like in and out of relationships)
"I" in Spanish is "yo." Yo soy artistico: I am artistic.
The word yo in Spanish refers to I, meaning me. When conjugated, yo becomes ver.
"Yo soy" means "I am" in Spanish. Yo estoy also means "I am". I depends on context.
"I" in Spanish is "yo".
yo is the Spanish word for "I."