"I am from..." (Lit: "I am of...")
"Yo: means "I". Example "Yo" soy de Corea. ["I" am from Korea.]" wrong because soy means i am so you would say soy de corea. you can say yo soy or just soy
Soy de la in English means I am of. Ex. I am of Spanish heritage. (Soy de la Spanish heritage.)
Soy is used for nationality. I am from Spain
soy de... means: I am from... literally: "I am of..."
If by America you mean USA Soy de Estados unidos if you mean the continent soy de America
In Spanish it means "I am from the U.S."
I am from... = Yo soy de...
"Yo soy de Ohio" in Spanish translates to "I am from Ohio" in English.
No soy de Milano would translate into something along the lines of "I am not from Milano".
To say you are from Miami, say, "Soy de Miami." "Soy" means "I" while "de" means "from". So "Soy de" means "I am from".
"I am from" in spanish is "Yo soy de...."
Soy de Jamaica