Most of the time, it means "you are", for a singular "you" (plural "you are" is estis). On occasion it means "you [singular] eat" instead, as an alternative to the regular form edis.
Es.
"You are."
You probably mean ludis ergo es, which means "you play, therefore you are" (singular "you"). Ludes is "you will play".
"Una palabra nueva es" translates to "a new word is" in English.
It means "are you? " In French Ex: Es tu ici? Are you here?
quis es means "who are you?"
you are (singular)
The word interesante in English means interesting.
The Latin for "you are" is the second person singular present active indicative form of the verb sum, which is es.
You are Calibus.
The Latin equivalent of 'You think therefore you are' may be Cogitas ergo es. Or it may be Cogitatis ergo estis. In the word-by-word translation, the verbs 'cogitas' and 'cogitatis' respectively mean 'you' and 'you all'. The adverb 'ergo' means 'therefore'. The verbs 'es' and 'estis' respectively mean 'you are' and 'you all are'.
The phrase "la silla es de color café" translates to "the chair is brown" in English.