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.
The ser form of "ella" is "es." In Spanish, "ser" is an irregular verb that means "to be," and "es" is the third-person singular present tense form used for "ella" (she).
It depends if you're talking about yourself or someone else. If you were talking about yourself it would be: Yo quiero ser mas que tu amigo(a). If you were talking about someone else it would be: El or Ella quiere ser mas que tu amigo(a).
"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"
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.
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"