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For the subject pronouns my teacher mentioned words like the word "Soy" going with the word "Yo" and so on. What are the others like that? What do they mean?

2006-12-06 11:09:16 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Languages

4 answers

"Soy" is from the verb "ser" (which means to be). It's at the first person so the translation is "am".
"Yo" means "I".
The other subject pronouns are "tú" (you), "él" (he), "ella" (she), "usted" (a polite form of saying you), "nosotros" (we), "vosotros" (plural you), "ellos" (they for males), "ellas" (they for females), "ustedes" (polite way of saying plural you)
Hope this helps

2006-12-06 11:17:24 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

"yo soy" is the permanent form of "i am".

yes, all verbs are like that in spanish. that includes present, past, and future tenses along with reflexives.

yo estaba
yo miento
yo creo que
me despierto

2006-12-06 19:14:07 · answer #2 · answered by JaSam 4 · 0 0

Yo............I
Tu............You(familiar)
el/ella........He /she
Usted/ ustedes ....You(formal) you(All of you)
Nosotros...............We (all of us)
Ellos/Ellas.............They (masc. femin....)
por ejmplos:
Yo me voy..... Tu llegaste ayer......Usted habla demasiado....Ustedes lloran...... Nosotros cantan mal......ellos/ellas...estan Americanos.

But you use those only if you want to put the emphasis on the subject.
Ex: Soy Dominicano.. That's enough to say "i am Dominican" but if you want to put the emphasis on your person , you'll say: "YO soy Dominicano".

2006-12-06 19:28:44 · answer #3 · answered by maxon475 3 · 0 0

they are:
tu eres
el/ella/usted
nosotros somos
vosotros sois
ellos/ellas/ustedes son
they mean:
you are
he/she/it is
we are
you(formal)are
they are
i don't remember how to say he/she/it is
sorry, hope this helps.

2006-12-06 19:17:17 · answer #4 · answered by summer 369 4 · 0 0

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