'est' is a verb, in Latin and in French. It means 'he/she/it is'.
So in Latin you can say 'coquus iratus est' as in 'the chef is angry',
or 'puella pulcher est' as in 'the girl is pretty' or 'she is a pretty girl'.
So in short, anywhere where you would usually say 'he/she/it is' in English, you can replace with the Latin word 'est'.
Est means "[he, she, it, there, this, that, etc.] is". For example, Semper spes est means "There is always hope" in Latin.
She is the fastest runner on the team.
I always keep on the qui vive when walking alone at night to ensure my safety.
Dieu est Amour is the correct one!
elle est plus grande que lui. > 'elle' is feminine: use the feminine 'grande'
d'où est-elle ? d'où vient-elle ? familiarly: d'où est-ce qu'elle est, d'où est-ce qu'elle vient
'il est possible que' is not a complete sentence. It means 'it is possible that'...
La classe means the class in French. La classe de francais est tres intelligente!
That's life.
Quel est le probleme?
Example sentence - We had to identify each continent on the map as part of our geography test.
The word "taille" in French can mean "size" or "waist." Example: "Je porte une jupe taille haute" (I am wearing a high-waisted skirt).
Le connaissance est la puissance (knowledge is power).