"Est" is the present tense of the verb "to be" in Latin.
The past tense of the French word "est" is "était."
The usual expression is simply "Opus est" (It / that is needed), as pronouns such as "id" (it) are usually omitted in Latin, because they are redundant with the tense of the verb.
"est-ce que tu es..." means "are you...". Est-ce que is a very common question form, roughly meaning "is it". "Est-ce que tu es un garçon" would read "is it that you are a boy?" if we translated that literally.
The correct phrase is "in est" in Latin. "Est in" would be grammatically incorrect.
The verb avoir means to be. Je suis: I am Tu es: You are (singular) Il est: He is Elle est: She is Nous avons: We are Vous êtes: You are (Plural, formal) On est: One is Ils sont: They are (masculine) Elles sont: They are (feminine)
The past tense of the French word "est" is "était."
Est means is, as in he, she , it is in the present tense.
est on its own means is and it's conjugated as the singular third person present tense form of the verb être(to be).He is translates to Il est.She is translates to Elle est.
"Is" is the present tense of the verb "etre", "to be". To say "it is" would be "Il est" for a masculine object, and "Elle est" for a feminine one.
"Christus factus est" is Latin for, "Christ is born (or literally, created)."This answer is wrong, as many similar answers about the verb form ". . . us est" have been wrong on this site.It looks like a present tense (est being the present tense of the irregular verb esse, to be). But when placed after the ". . . us" form of another verb it creates the pastperfect tense:natus est = he/she/it has been borninterfectus est = he/etc has been killedfactus est = he/etc has been madeSo Christus factus est means The Christ (that is, The Anointed One) has been created.
The usual expression is simply "Opus est" (It / that is needed), as pronouns such as "id" (it) are usually omitted in Latin, because they are redundant with the tense of the verb.
"Est-ce que" is an extremely common feature in French. It serves to put your phrase in question form. English speakers can use 'did' in similar situations: Did he see ...? > Est-ce qu'il a vu ... ? In the French phrase, the verb will be in the past tense. Est-ce que can also stand for "do/does" when the French verb is in the present tense: Does he go to his car? > Est-ce qu'il va à sa voiture ?
The usual expression is simply "Opus est" (It / that is needed), as pronouns such as "id" (it) are usually omitted in Latin, because they are redundant with the tense of the verb.
Quelle est la phrase au futur? in French is "What is the sentence in the future tense?" in English.
If you mean the Lating verb "esse", then the present active indicative looks like this:sum - I ames - you (singular) areest - he/she/it issumus - we areestis - you (plural) aresunt - they areThere are five other tenses in the indicative alone, and then the subjunctive, imperative, and other forms. A link to the complete conjugation can be found below.
Depuis quand est-ce que vous êtes en Amérique? Depuis combien de temps est-ce que vous êtes en Amérique? It may seem weird because because we use a slightly different tense in English, but you do use the present tense to ask this question in French.
et means and.est means is and is conjugated from the singular third person present tense of the verb être (to be)Both of these words are pronounced the same, except that est requires a liaison if the following word begins with a vowel or H muet (mute H).Moi et toi.Me and you.Il est ici.He is here.