Usted / la / lo / le
ustedes / les / los / las
tú / ti / te
vosotros, as / os
Yo
Ustedes (formal / familiar in Latin America; formal in Spain)
Vosotros / vosotras (familiar in Spain, poetic in Latin America)
In a student-teacher relationship, you would normally use the formal mode of speech. This means you would use "usted" for "you".
"Father" is a male noun
subject pronoun - él
direct object pronoun - lo
indirect object pronoun - le
There is no particular pronoun in Spanish that refers specifically to "your father", but the concept (as in English) can be replaced by "he". "He" in Spanish is "El" (with an accent mark).
You in Spanish is "tú" (only use if you are familiar with this person).You in Spanish can also be "usted" (only use if you are unfamiliar with this person or are being formal).You in Spanish for the plural form (talking to a group of people) is "vosotros" (only used in Spain).Under certain circumstances, "te" can be used for 'you' in Spanish (generally used as a pronoun, i.e. "I am going to kill you" is "Voy a matarte")However, your regular, everyday use for 'you' in Spanish will be "tú".
The Spanish word for a male teacher is maestro. Also, you can use the word professor. For female teachers, it is maestra and profesora.
a picador is a bullfighter, the one who rides on a horse with a lance; but probably you wouldn't use 'le', which is an indirect object pronoun, or French for 'the', which is 'el' in Spanish.
Can you? Yes. Is it convention? No, people generally use amigas to refer to all girls.
If you are talking to a teacher, you are most likely going to be using the Usted form of conjugation because they are going to be older or of higher level then you. You can either say: Usted es una maestra. (To a female teacher) Usted es un maestro. (To a male teacher) If you want to use the Tu form of conjugation then you would say: Tú eres un(a) maestro/a.
You would use the pronoun "tรบ" when talking to a classmate in Spanish.
When talking about your grandmother in Spanish, you would use the subject pronoun "ella" (she).
The subject pronoun used when talking about a boy and a boy in Spanish is "ellos".
You would use "Usted" or "Ud."
Ramón and I is the equivalent of "we". In Spanish, that's "nosotros". If you and Ramón were both girls, you could use "nosotras".
The pronoun who is used for a person; for example:Our geometry teacher is the one who was our algebra teacher last year.The pronoun what is used for something; for example:We do what it takes to get the job done.
The appropriate pronoun is 'he'. In the sentence the pronoun he, takes the place of the noun 'teacher' as the subject complement following the linking verb 'will be'. A pronoun functioning as a subject complement (predicate nominative) is always a nominative (subjective) form.
él
The pronoun "รฉl" is used to refer to a brother in Spanish.
You certainly can, however it isn't recommended. A teacher or professor might dock you points for using a pronoun.
"I looked at the teacher while she was talking" ---- (Yo) observaba a la profesora al momento en que ella hablaba (use "ella" to avoid confusion with "yo"). Omit "yo" with "observaba" if the context is already given.
You in Spanish is "tú" (only use if you are familiar with this person).You in Spanish can also be "usted" (only use if you are unfamiliar with this person or are being formal).You in Spanish for the plural form (talking to a group of people) is "vosotros" (only used in Spain).Under certain circumstances, "te" can be used for 'you' in Spanish (generally used as a pronoun, i.e. "I am going to kill you" is "Voy a matarte")However, your regular, everyday use for 'you' in Spanish will be "tú".