"Yo soy" IS conjugated. It is the conjugated form of the verb "Ser"
It depends on context because in Spanish, there are two verbs with different conjugations for the verb "to be." One is estar (which is conjugated to estoy in the first person) and ser (which is conjugated to soy in the first person).The translation of "I'm bored" is "estoy aburrido" - with "estoy" meaning "I am".However, the translation of "I'm boring" is "soyaburrido" - with "soy" meaning "I am".
NOOOOOO its not it is! SOY= I AM soy is a conjugated form of ser -to be
The word yo in Spanish refers to I, meaning me. When conjugated, yo becomes ver.
I am who is... maybe trying to say: i am who i am..
Yes. It would mean "I am logical". The "yo" is not necessary, since the conjugated verb form "soy" is used only in the first person singular. It is not "incorrect", though.
yo no soy: I'm not
YO SOY MARIA
Soy yo: "I am me," or "it's me."
subject = yo, yo means "I" verb = soy, it's verb to be = am
Yo soy or Yo estoy. Yo soy médico. Yo estoy casado.
None. The pronoun, "yo" in this case, can usually be omitted. This is because unlike English, in Spanish verbs are conjugated differently for different grammatical persons, plural and singular, etc.
"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