Well, honey, when you're shooting the breeze with a friend, you use the informal form of the verb "ser," which is "eres." So, next time you're chatting it up with your amigo, just remember to drop that "eres" like it's hot.
"Es", which is a form of the verb "ser" (to be).
Quite possibly you mean the nosotros form of ser. The other way doesn't work because there is no ser form of nosotros. The nosotros form of ser is somos.
It would fall in the category of estar, as estar is a temporary verb and ser is permanent.
Es is from the verb ser, and esta is (probably) from the verb estar, but the a should be accented. Ser is used for: Date (May 3rd), Occupation, Characteristics, Time, Origin (you are French or you are from Delaware), and Religion; DOCTOR is the acronym. Estar is used for: Emotions, Location (you are in the library) and Feelings; ELF is the acronym, and yes it repeats in order to be a proper acronym. *In other words, ser= permanent features while estar= constantly changing things. Yes, you can change religion, but usually people don't change their religion every day
I passed this question by 5 Spanish Professors at UGA (University of Georgia) and no-one could come up with an infinitive form of a verb that ends with -ie.
When talking to yourself or referring to yourself in a casual way, you would use the first person singular form of the verb "ser," which is "soy."
The imperfect "tú" form of the verb "ser" is "eras" and the imperfect "usted" form is "era".
"Es", which is a form of the verb "ser" (to be).
Era is the imperfect yo ("I") form of the Spanish verb ser ("to be"). Without the subject pronoun, it may translate as "He was," "It was," "She was" or "You were" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "(yo) EY-ra" in Uruguayan Spanish.
If you are talking to a male: ¿Quieres ser mi amigo? If you are talking to a female: ¿Quieres ser mi amiga?
"Yo soy" IS conjugated. It is the conjugated form of the verb "Ser"
Ser is one of the Spanish verbs for "to be." The other is estar. If you mean "son", that is the third person plural present form of the verb. It would mean "they are."
no es (singular) of the verb "ser". no está is the singular of the verb "estar."No son (plural) of the verb "ser". no estan(plural) of the verb "estar"
The past participle of the Spanish verb "ser" is "sido."
My father is my grandparent's son.
Bien with the verb "estar" Bueno with the verb "ser"
Quite possibly you mean the nosotros form of ser. The other way doesn't work because there is no ser form of nosotros. The nosotros form of ser is somos.