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So far, you've practised Spanish sentences meaning I am ... and he/she is .... On this page, you'll practise some sentences meaning you are ... when referring to a single person.
Saying you are in Spanish when referring to a single personFor now, we'll concentrate on referring to a single person. In Spain and most of Mexico, there are two different ways of saying you when referring to a single person (but see the box opposite):
The factors that decide whether the tú or usted form is used are quite complex, and even for native Spanish speakers it can be a difficult issue. We won't get bogged down in the details for the purpose of this tutorial, and will see the difference as between "addressing a friend" and addressing somebody on "formal terms". In English, the nearest equivalent to "formal terms" would be using a surname such as "Mrs Smith" or a title such as "Sir", "Madam" (although these are often very formal in English). |
vosSpanish actually has a third form of address, vos, for addressing a single person. It is mainstream in Argentina and used to some extent (e.g. as a regionalism or by certain social classes) in many countries in Latin America. It's unusual for foreign learners to use vos forms because:
In Spain, vos is found in older literature and in biblical texts, and the verb form is the same as vosotros (see later in this tutorial). |
The verb forms for these forms of address are generally as follows:
The first of these statements is always true for any Spanish verb; the second of these statements is true for nearly all Spanish verbs, and in nearly all tenses, including the verb (estar - to be) that we're using here.
As we mentioned, Spanish subject pronouns are generally omitted, so that (tú) estás would generally just be estás. In the case of the usted form, the verb form is the same as the he/she form. So it may be slightly more common to pronounce the pronoun usted in order to make the subject clear.
This then gives the following usual forms for saying you are ...:
In the rest of the examples on this page, we'll omit tú and put usted in brackets. In the "fridge magnets" exercises at the end of this page, you'll omit usted just for the sake of simplicity.
As before, when using está and estás with an adjective, you need to make the adjective form match the gender of the subject, which in this case is the person you're speaking to. So, using the adjective cansado (tired), this gives the following four combinations for you're tired, depending on the gender of the person being spoken to, and on whether they're being addressed on formal or informal terms:
Mode of address | Talking to male person | Talking to female person |
---|---|---|
Informal (e.g. to a friend, family member) | estás cansado you're tired | estás cansada you're tired |
Formal (e.g. to a customer, teacher, boss etc) | (usted) está cansado you're tired, Mr X | (usted) está cansada you're tired, Mrs X |
Now we'll add estás and está (with the meaning of you are ...) to the forms to practise. Remember that está will be used now for either the "he/she" meaning, or for "you" in a formal sense. When you are asked to give a sentence meaning you are ..., it will be made clear whether you're talking to a friend (requiring informal estás) or addressing somebody using a formal mode of address (requiring está). In any case, don't forget to make the adjective form agree with the gender of the subject! (For "I" and "you" forms, either male or female will be specified.)
On the next page, we're going to introduce a second way of saying "I am" used with certain adjectives. That is, we'll introduce the difference between ser and estar.
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