In Spanish, estar is used to describe a temporary state or condition—how someone or something is right now. The words you listed are typical adjectives that go with estar.
Estar bien / mal
This means someone’s condition, often health or general state. Estoy bien = I’m fine. Estoy mal = I’m not well (physically or mentally).
Estar solo / acompañado
This describes whether someone is alone or with others. Estoy solo means I’m alone. Estoy acompañado means I’m with someone.
Estar roto / arreglado
This refers to the condition of an object. Está roto = it’s broken. Está arreglado = it’s fixed. The condition can change, so estar is used.
Estar vacío / lleno
This describes whether something has contents or not. El vaso está vacío = the glass is empty. Está lleno = it’s full.
Estar abierto / cerrado
This is about current state, not permanent nature. La tienda está abierta = the shop is open (now). Está cerrada = it’s closed.
Estar de pie / sentado / tumbado
These describe body position. Estoy de pie = I’m standing. Estoy sentado = I’m sitting. Estoy tumbado = I’m lying down.
Estar alegre / triste / contento / animado
These express emotions or mood, which are temporary. Estoy alegre = I’m happy. Estoy triste = I’m sad. Estoy contento = I’m pleased. Estoy animado = I’m cheerful / in good spirits.
In short, use estar when the situation, condition, position, or feeling can change.
Estar de buen humor de mal humor… Estar harto/aburrido… Estar vivo muerto… Estar enfermo/sano/ loco… Estar cansado/agotado. Estar dormido/ despierto…
Here are clear explanations in English. All of these use estar because they describe states or conditions, not permanent characteristics.
Estar de buen humor / de mal humor
This describes someone’s mood at the moment.
Estoy de buen humor = I’m in a good mood.
Estoy de mal humor = I’m in a bad mood.
Estar harto / aburrido
These describe mental or emotional states.
Estoy harto = I’m fed up / I’ve had enough.
Estoy aburrido = I’m bored.
Estar vivo / muerto
These describe a state of existence.
Está vivo = he/she is alive.
Está muerto = he/she is dead.
Even though “dead” is permanent, Spanish still treats it as a state.
Estar enfermo / sano / loco
These describe health or mental condition.
Estoy enfermo = I’m ill.
Estoy sano = I’m healthy.
Estoy loco = I’m crazy (often temporary, emotional, or exaggerated).
Estar cansado / agotado
These describe level of tiredness.
Estoy cansado = I’m tired.
Estoy agotado = I’m exhausted.
Estar dormido / despierto
These describe current physical state.
Está dormido = he/she is asleep.
Está despierto = he/she is awake.
Key idea:
Use estar when talking about how someone is right now—their mood, health, energy, or condition—even if that state lasts a long time.
VOCABULARIO – AEROPUERTOS (Airports)
Below is common Spanish airport vocabulary with clear English meanings.
Aeropuerto – airport
Terminal – terminal building
Mostrador de facturación / check-in – check-in counter
Tarjeta de embarque – boarding pass
Equipaje – luggage
Equipaje de mano – carry-on luggage
Facturar (el equipaje) – to check (luggage)
Control de seguridad – security check
Control de pasaportes – passport control
Aduana – customs
Puerta de embarque – boarding gate
Embarque – boarding
Salida – departure
Llegada – arrival
Retraso – delay
Cancelación – cancellation
Vuelo – flight
Escala – stopover / layover
Vuelo directo – direct flight
Vuelo con escala – connecting flight
Cinta de equipaje – baggage carousel
Recogida de equipaje – baggage claim
Carrito de equipaje – luggage cart
Información – information desk
If you want, I can also:
• group this by check-in → security → boarding → arrival, or
• add example sentences, or
• make a beginner / travel phrase version for real conversations.
Subject pronouns
Yo – I
Tú – you (informal, singular)
Él / Ella / Usted – he / she / you (formal, singular)
Nosotros / Nosotras – we (masculine / feminine)
Vosotros / Vosotras – you all (informal, Spain)
Ellos / Ellas / Ustedes – they / you all (formal or Latin America)
LLAMARSE (to be called / to call oneself)
This is a reflexive verb, so it uses reflexive pronouns (me, te, se, nos, os, se).
- Me llamo – I am called
- Te llamas – you are called
- Se llama – he/she/you (formal) is called
- Nos llamamos – we are called
- Os llamáis – you all are called (Spain)
- Se llaman – they / you all are called
Used to say your name.
TENER (to have)
- Tengo – I have
- Tienes – you have
- Tiene – he/she/you (formal) has
- Tenemos – we have
- Tenéis – you all have (Spain)
- Tienen – they / you all have
Used for possession, age, physical states.
SER (to be – permanent characteristics)
- Soy – I am
- Eres – you are
- Es – he/she/you (formal) is
- Somos – we are
- Sois – you all are (Spain)
- Son – they / you all are
Used for identity, nationality, profession, essential traits.
VIVIR (to live)
- Vivo – I live
- Vives – you live
- Vive – he/she/you (formal) lives
- Vivimos – we live
- Vivís – you all live (Spain)
- Viven – they / you all live
Used to say where someone lives.
DEDICARSE (to be dedicated to / to work as)
Also a reflexive verb, often used for profession or occupation.
- Me dedico – I work as / I am engaged in
- Te dedicas – you work as
- Se dedica – he/she/you (formal) works as
- Nos dedicamos – we work as
- Os dedicáis – you all work as (Spain)
- Se dedican – they / you all work as
Key idea
- SER → who you are (permanent)
- TENER → what you have
- VIVIR → where you live
- LLAMARSE → what your name is
- DEDICARSE → what you do for a living
If you want, I can next combine these into real conversation examples, or explain why Spanish often drops the subject pronoun.
INFORMACIÓN (Personal information)
Nombre – first name
Apellido – last name
Nacionalidad – nationality
Edad – age
Profesión – profession
Lenguas / Idiomas – languages
Domicilio – address / place of residence
Teléfono – phone number
Correo electrónico – email address
PREGUNTA / RESPUESTA
¿Cómo te llamas?
→ Me llamo… / Soy…
(What is your name?)
¿Cómo te apellidas?
→ Me apellido…
(What is your last name?)
¿De dónde eres?
→ Soy… / Soy de…
(Where are you from?)
¿Cuántos años tienes?
→ Tengo … años.
(How old are you?)
¿A qué te dedicas?
→ Soy…
(What do you do for a living?)
¿Qué lenguas / idiomas hablas?
→ Hablo…
(What languages do you speak?)
¿Dónde vives?
→ Vivo en…
(Where do you live?)
¿Tienes número de teléfono?
→ Sí, es el… / No.
(Do you have a phone number?)
¿Tienes correo electrónico?
→ Sí, es el… / No.
(Do you have an email address?)
Important notes
Spanish often drops the subject pronoun (yo, tú) because the verb already shows who is speaking.
Tengo 40 años (not Yo tengo 40 años).
For age, Spanish uses TENER, not ser.
“I am 40 years old” → Tengo 40 años.
If you want, I can next turn this into a full dialogue, or make a fill-in-the-blank exercise for practice.
Sentence
Vamos a conocer a los y las compañeras de clase.
→ Let’s get to know our classmates.
- Vamos a = we are going to
- conocer = to get to know / meet
- los y las compañeras = male and female classmates (inclusive form)
Introduction
Soy Carolina y tengo 40 (cuarenta) años.
→ I am Carolina and I am 40 years old.
- tener is used for age, not ser.
Soy de España, de Vigo.
→ I am from Spain, from Vigo.
Soy médica.
→ I am a doctor.
- médica is the feminine form of médico.
Small correction (very important)
Soy Carolina y tengo 40 (cuarenta) años. Soy de España, de Vigo. Soy médica.
Key grammar points
- SER → identity, origin, profession (Soy Carolina, soy de España, soy médica)
- TENER → age (tengo 40 años)
- Spanish capitalizes only the first word of a sentence.
If you want, I can turn this into a classroom dialogue or help you create similar introductions for other students.
Subject + Verb (TENER – to have)
Subject pronouns
- yo – I
- tú – you (informal, singular)
- él / ella – he / she
Verb: TENER (present tense)
- yo → tengo – I have
- tú → tienes – you have
- él / ella → tiene – he / she has
Examples
- Yo tengo 40 años.
→ I am 40 years old. - Tú tienes un teléfono.
→ You have a phone. - Él tiene una casa.
→ He has a house.
Important note
In Spanish, the subject pronoun is often omitted because the verb form already shows the subject:
- Tengo 40 años. (not Yo tengo 40 años)
If you want, I can show the plural forms next or explain why “tener” is irregular.
Let’s talk about Present Tense! Some important, common verbs have forms that need to be memorized. subject yo tú él / ella verb (ser) soy. eres es subject YO tú él / ella verb (estar) estoy estas está
Let’s look at the Spanish present tense, focusing on two very important verbs that must be memorized: SER and ESTAR. Both mean “to be”, but they are used differently.
Subject pronouns
- yo – I
- tú – you (informal, singular)
- él / ella – he / she
Verb: SER (to be – permanent or essential)
| Subject | Form |
|---|---|
| yo | soy |
| tú | eres |
| él / ella | es |
SER is used for:
identity, nationality, profession, permanent characteristics.
Examples:
- Soy médico. → I am a doctor.
- Eres español. → You are Spanish.
- Ella es Carolina. → She is Carolina.
Verb: ESTAR (to be – temporary state or condition)
| Subject | Form |
|---|---|
| yo | estoy |
| tú | estás |
| él / ella | está |
(Important: estás and está have accents.)
ESTAR is used for:
feelings, health, location, condition, mood.
Examples:
- Estoy bien. → I am fine.
- Estás cansado. → You are tired.
- Ella está en casa. → She is at home.
Key idea to remember
- SER → what something is (identity, permanent)
- ESTAR → how or where something is (temporary)
Very important note
In Spanish, the subject pronoun is often omitted:
- Soy médico.
- Estoy cansado.
The verb form already tells us who the subject is.
If you want, next we can:
- compare SER vs ESTAR with the same adjective, or
- add plural forms, or
- practice with simple exercises.
subject YO tú el / ella verb (tener) tengo tienes tiene
Here is a very clear, beginner-friendly explanation of what you wrote.
Subject + Verb (TENER – present tense)
Subject pronouns
- yo – I
- tú – you (informal, singular)
- él / ella – he / she
Verb: TENER (to have)
| Subject | Form |
|---|---|
| yo | tengo |
| tú | tienes |
| él / ella | tiene |
Examples
- Tengo 40 años. → I am 40 years old.
- Tienes un teléfono. → You have a phone.
- Ella tiene un correo electrónico. → She has an email address.
Important note
Spanish often drops the subject pronoun:
- Tengo 40 años (not Yo tengo 40 años)
Key idea
TENER is used for:
- possession (tengo un coche),
- age (tengo 40 años),
- physical states (tengo hambre, tengo frío).
If you want, I can next show plural forms or explain why “tener” is irregular.
Let’s talk about Present Tense! Some important, common verbs have forms that need to be memorized. subject YO tú él / ella verb (ser) soy. eres es subject yo tú él / ella verb (estar) estoy estas está
Let’s talk about the Spanish Present Tense.
Some very common verbs are irregular, so their forms must be memorized. Two of the most important are SER and ESTAR. Both mean “to be”, but they are used differently.
Subject pronouns
- yo – I
- tú – you (informal, singular)
- él / ella – he / she
Verb: SER (to be – permanent or essential)
| Subject | Form |
|---|---|
| yo | soy |
| tú | eres |
| él / ella | es |
SER is used for:
identity, nationality, profession, and permanent characteristics.
Examples:
- Soy médico. → I am a doctor.
- Eres español. → You are Spanish.
- Ella es Carolina. → She is Carolina.
Verb: ESTAR (to be – temporary or current state)
| Subject | Form |
|---|---|
| yo | estoy |
| tú | estás |
| él / ella | está |
(Important: estás and está need an accent.)
ESTAR is used for:
feelings, health, location, condition, and mood.
Examples:
- Estoy bien. → I am fine.
- Estás cansado. → You are tired.
- Ella está en casa. → She is at home.
Key idea
- SER → what something is (permanent)
- ESTAR → how or where something is (temporary)
Important note
In Spanish, the subject pronoun is often omitted:
- Soy médico.
- Estoy cansado.
The verb form already tells us who the subject is.
If you want, we can next:
- compare SER vs ESTAR with the same adjective, or
- add plural forms, or
- practice with short exercises.
..Juan er un hombre Pedro está tumbad
Your sentences need small corrections. Here is the correct Spanish, followed by a clear explanation in English.
✅ Correct sentences
Juan es un hombre.
Pedro está tumbado.
Explanation
Juan es un hombre.
→ Juan is a man.
- SER (es) is used for identity and what someone is.
- Hombre is a noun describing who Juan is, so ser is correct.
Pedro está tumbado.
→ Pedro is lying down.
- ESTAR (está) is used for temporary physical position.
- Tumbado describes Pedro’s current posture, not a permanent trait.
What was wrong in the original
- ❌ er → should be es
- ❌ está tumbad → missing -o → tumbado
Key rule to remember
- SER → identity / what someone is
- ESTAR → position / condition / state
If you want, we can now practice with more SER vs ESTAR contrasts like:
es aburrido vs está aburrido.
Contento Un chico Joven Rubio Sentado Deportista Moreno Un hombre v Mayor Triste Baio Tumbado / Alto Oficinista
Here is a clear explanation in English, with meaning, type of word, and which verb to use (SER or ESTAR). I also correct small spelling issues.
Contento
= happy
→ adjective (emotion) → ESTAR
Está contento. (He is happy.)
Un chico
= a boy / a young guy
→ noun (person) → SER
Es un chico.
Joven
= young
→ adjective (age) → SER
Es joven.
Rubio
= blond
→ adjective (physical trait) → SER
Es rubio.
Sentado
= sitting
→ adjective (position) → ESTAR
Está sentado.
Deportista
= athletic / sportsman
→ noun / adjective (lifestyle) → SER
Es deportista.
Moreno
= dark-haired / dark-skinned
→ adjective (physical trait) → SER
Es moreno.
Un hombre
= a man
→ noun → SER
Es un hombre.
Mayor
= older
→ adjective (age comparison) → SER
Es mayor.
Triste
= sad
→ adjective (emotion) → ESTAR
Está triste.
Bajo (you wrote “Baio” → ❌)
= short
→ adjective (height) → SER
Es bajo.
Tumbado
= lying down
→ adjective (position) → ESTAR
Está tumbado.
Alto
= tall
→ adjective (height) → SER
Es alto.
Oficinista
= office worker
→ noun (profession) → SER
Es oficinista.
Very important pattern
- SER → identity, age, profession, physical traits
- ESTAR → emotions, temporary states, body position
If you want, I can now combine these into full sentences like:
Es un chico joven, rubio y deportista, pero hoy está triste y sentado.
1. Dos más dos…
a. no son
b. son cuatro.
2. La Luna…
a. es un satélite.
b. es un planeta.
3. La capital de Perú…
a. es Montevideo.
b. es Lima.
4. Los Pirineos…
a. son unas montañas que separan España de Francia.
b. son unas islas.
5. La bandera española…
a. está roja.
b. es roja y amarilla.
6. Sevilla…
a. está en Galicia.
b. está en Andalucía.
7. Las islas Baleares…
a. están en el mar Cantábrico.
b. están en el mar Mediterráneo.
8. Una persona agotada es una persona que…
a. está cansada.
b. está dormida.
9. El Atlántico…
a. es un océano.
b. es un mar.
10. La Tierra…
a. está más lejos del Sol que Marte.
b. está más cerca del Sol que Marte.
11. El régimen político español…
a. es una monarquía.
b. es una república.
Key reminder
- SER → definitions, facts, identity, classification.
- ESTAR → location and variable states.
If you want, I can explain why each one uses SER or ESTAR, or make a similar exercise for practice.
1. El Sol… a. …….. a 180.000 km. de la Tierra. b. … a un año luz de la Tierra.
Here is the correct completion, with SER / ESTAR, and the incorrect option crossed out.
1. El Sol…
a. está a 180.000 km de la Tierra.
b. está a un año luz de la Tierra.
Why? (short explanation)
- ESTAR is used for location and distance.
- Only one statement can be true, so the incorrect one is crossed out.
If you want, we can continue one sentence at a time in the same way.
please write correct 11 sentences and english translation
Here are the 11 correct Spanish sentences, each followed by a clear English translation.
1. Dos más dos son cuatro.
→ Two plus two are four.
2. La Luna es un satélite.
→ The Moon is a satellite.
3. La capital de Perú es Lima.
→ The capital of Peru is Lima.
4. Los Pirineos son unas montañas que separan España de Francia.
→ The Pyrenees are mountains that separate Spain from France.
5. La bandera española es roja y amarilla.
→ The Spanish flag is red and yellow.
6. Sevilla está en Andalucía.
→ Seville is in Andalusia.
7. Las islas Baleares están en el mar Mediterráneo.
→ The Balearic Islands are in the Mediterranean Sea.
8. Una persona agotada está cansada.
→ An exhausted person is tired.
9. El Atlántico es un océano.
→ The Atlantic is an ocean.
10. La Tierra está más cerca del Sol que Marte.
→ The Earth is closer to the Sun than Mars.
11. El régimen político español es una monarquía.
→ The Spanish political system is a monarchy.
Key reminder
- SER → facts, definitions, identity.
- ESTAR → location, condition, position.
If you want, I can now highlight the pattern sentence by sentence or make a new exercise to practice SER vs ESTAR.
and last sentence
Here is the last sentence, written correctly, with its English translation.
El Sol está a 180.000 km de la Tierra.
→ The Sun is 180,000 km from the Earth.
(ESTAR is used because this is about distance / location.)
If you want, I can also correct the distance scientifically and rewrite it accurately.
please tell me how to distinguish ser and estar.
Here is a simple, reliable way to distinguish SER and ESTAR, with clear rules and examples.
SER vs ESTAR — how to choose
Use SER when you talk about what something is
Think definition, identity, or facts.
Use SER for:
- Identity: Es Juan. (He is Juan.)
- Profession: Es médico. (He is a doctor.)
- Nationality / origin: Es de España. (He is from Spain.)
- Characteristics (usually permanent): Es alto. (He is tall.)
- Classification / facts: La Luna es un satélite.
👉 Ask yourself: “What is it?” → SER
Use ESTAR when you talk about how or where something is
Think state, condition, or location.
Use ESTAR for:
- Location: Está en Sevilla. (It is in Seville.)
- Condition / state: Está cansado. (He is tired.)
- Emotions / mood: Está contento. (He is happy.)
- Physical position: Está sentado. (He is sitting.)
- Temporary situations: Está cerrado. (It is closed.)
👉 Ask yourself: “How is it?” or “Where is it?” → ESTAR
Same adjective, different meaning
- Es aburrido = He is boring (his personality).
- Está aburrido = He is bored (how he feels now).
- Es listo = He is smart.
- Está listo = He is ready.
One sentence rule (very useful)
SER defines — ESTAR describes.
Quick memory trick
- SER = identity card (name, job, origin)
- ESTAR = today’s condition (feelings, place, position)
If you want, I can give you a 1-minute decision test (choose SER or ESTAR) or create a visual table for memorization.
Islas Baleares
Islas Baleares
Correct sentence (with SER / ESTAR):
Las Islas Baleares están en el mar Mediterráneo.
→ The Balearic Islands are in the Mediterranean Sea.
Why ESTAR?
- ESTAR is used for location (where something is).
- We are saying where the islands are, not what they are.
Contrast with SER (definition):
Las Islas Baleares son un archipiélago.
→ The Balearic Islands are an archipelago.
Rule reminder:
- SER → what it is (definition/classification)
- ESTAR → where it is (location)
0. Dos más dos…
a. son cuatro.
b. no son seis.
1. El Sol…
a. está a 180.000 km de la Tierra.
b. está a un año luz de la Tierra.
2. La Luna…
a. es un satélite.
b. es un planeta.
3. La capital de Perú…
a. es Montevideo.
b. es Lima.
4. Los Pirineos…
a. son unas montañas que separan España de Francia.
b. son unas islas.
5. La bandera española…
a. es roja.
b. es roja y amarilla.
6. Sevilla…
a. está en Galicia.
b. está en Andalucía.
7. Las islas Baleares…
a. están en el mar Cantábrico.
b. están en el mar Mediterráneo.
8. Una persona agotada es una persona que…
a. está cansada.
b. está dormida.
9. El Atlántico…
a. es un océano.
b. es un mar.
10. La Tierra…
a. está más lejos del Sol que Marte.
b. está más cerca del Sol que Marte.
11. El régimen político español…
a. es una monarquía.
b. es una república.
Quick reminder
- SER → facts, definitions, classification.
- ESTAR → location, distance, condition.
If you want, I can now explain each choice in one short line, or make a new exercise of the same type.
please write 12 correct sentences and the reaon of the select.
Here are 12 correct Spanish sentences, each followed by the reason for choosing SER or ESTAR. I keep the explanations short and clear.
1. Dos más dos son cuatro.
Reason: SER is used for mathematical facts and definitions.
2. El Sol está a 180.000 km de la Tierra.
Reason: ESTAR is used for location and distance.
3. La Luna es un satélite.
Reason: SER is used for scientific classification.
4. La capital de Perú es Lima.
Reason: SER is used for identity and official facts.
5. Los Pirineos son unas montañas que separan España de Francia.
Reason: SER is used for definition and nature.
6. La bandera española es roja y amarilla.
Reason: SER is used for essential characteristics.
7. Sevilla está en Andalucía.
Reason: ESTAR is used for geographical location.
8. Las islas Baleares están en el mar Mediterráneo.
Reason: ESTAR is used for location.
9. Una persona agotada está cansada.
Reason: ESTAR is used for a temporary physical condition.
10. El Atlántico es un océano.
Reason: SER is used for classification.
11. La Tierra está más cerca del Sol que Marte.
Reason: ESTAR is used for relative position.
12. El régimen político español es una monarquía.
Reason: SER is used for definition and institutional facts.
One-sentence rule to remember
SER defines what something is. ESTAR describes where or how it is.
Procedencia (origin / nationality)
Rodolfo es cubano.
→ Rodolfo is Cuban.
Reason: SER is used for origin and nationality (what someone is).
Material
¿Este anillo será de oro?
→ Will this ring be made of gold?
Reason: SER is used to talk about material or composition.
Profesión
Era médico. Bueno, era radiólogo.
→ He was a doctor. Well, he was a radiologist.
Reason: SER is used for profession, even in the past.
Forma (shape)
Mi dormitorio es rectangular.
→ My bedroom is rectangular.
Reason: SER is used for shape and inherent characteristics.
Marca (brand)
Mi móvil es Mokig.
→ My phone is Mokig.
Reason: SER is used for brand and identification.
Color
No, mi coche era verde.
→ No, my car was green.
Reason: SER is used for color as a defining trait.
Relaciones personales
Es mi sobrino.
→ He is my nephew.
Reason: SER is used for family relationships.
Antonio fue mi novio.
→ Antonio was my boyfriend.
Reason: SER is used for personal relationships and roles.
Fechas y horas
El lunes es Navidad.
→ Monday is Christmas.
Reason: SER is used for dates and events.
¿Ya son las cinco?
→ Is it five o’clock already?
Reason: SER is used for time.
Big rule to remember
SER is used for identity, origin, material, profession, shape, brand, color, relationships, dates, and time.
If you want, next I can:
- contrast these with ESTAR examples, or
- turn this into a one-page SER reference chart for memorization.
Usamos el verbo estar para hablar de la situación de un objeto. “Situación” puede ser localización en el espacio (dónde se encuentra un objeto) y también estado (cómo se encuentra un objeto): © 4. Adjetivo Localizar objetos en el espacio Estado en que se encuentra un objeto
Your Spanish explanation is correct. Here is a clear, polished version in Spanish, followed by a simple explanation in English with examples, exactly matching your headings.
Uso del verbo ESTAR
Usamos el verbo ESTAR para hablar de la situación de un objeto.
“SITUACIÓN” puede significar dos cosas:
- Localización en el espacio (dónde se encuentra un objeto)
- Estado (cómo se encuentra un objeto)
1. Localizar objetos en el espacio
Usamos ESTAR para decir dónde está algo.
- El libro está en la mesa.
- Sevilla está en Andalucía.
- Las llaves están en el bolso.
👉 This answers the question ¿Dónde está?
2. Estado en que se encuentra un objeto
Usamos ESTAR para hablar de la condición o estado de algo, normalmente temporal.
- La puerta está cerrada.
- El vaso está lleno.
- El coche está roto.
👉 This answers the question ¿Cómo está?
English summary
We use ESTAR to talk about the situation of an object.
- Location → where something is
- State → the condition it is in
SER defines what something is.
ESTAR describes where it is or how it is.
If you want, I can now:
- contrast this with SER + adjective, or
- create minimal pairs (es abierto / está abierto) for practice.
please explain in english
Here is a clear explanation in English, following your Spanish structure exactly.
Use of the verb ESTAR
We use the verb ESTAR to talk about the situation of an object.
“Situation” has two meanings:
- Location in space – where an object is
- State or condition – how an object is
1. Location in space
We use ESTAR to say where something is located.
Examples:
- The book is on the table. → El libro está en la mesa.
- Seville is in Andalusia. → Sevilla está en Andalucía.
This answers the question: Where is it?
2. State or condition
We use ESTAR to describe the condition or state of an object, usually temporary.
Examples:
- The door is closed. → La puerta está cerrada.
- The glass is full. → El vaso está lleno.
- The car is broken. → El coche está roto.
This answers the question: How is it?
Key idea
SER defines what something is.
ESTAR describes where something is or how it is.
This simple distinction works in most cases and is the safest way to choose between SER and ESTAR.
Está debajo de la mesa. Está en el árbol. Está lejos. Está cerca. Está tumbado. Está sentado. Está asustado. Está dormido.
Here is a clear explanation in English of each sentence.
All of them use ESTAR because they describe location, position, or state.
Está debajo de la mesa.
→ It is under the table.
Reason: ESTAR is used for location in space (where something is).
Está en el árbol.
→ It is in the tree.
Reason: ESTAR expresses physical location.
Está lejos.
→ It is far away.
Reason: ESTAR is used for relative position or distance.
Está cerca.
→ It is close / nearby.
Reason: ESTAR describes distance or proximity.
Está tumbado.
→ He / she is lying down.
Reason: ESTAR is used for body position.
Está sentado.
→ He / she is sitting.
Reason: ESTAR describes a temporary physical posture.
Está asustado.
→ He / she is frightened.
Reason: ESTAR is used for emotional state.
Está dormido.
→ He / she is asleep.
Reason: ESTAR describes a temporary physical state.
One simple rule
ESTAR = where something is or how it is right now.
If you want, I can contrast these with SER (for example: es dormido ❌ vs está dormido ✅) or make a short practice exercise.
SER (to be)
Present tense – SER
- yo soy – I am
- tú eres – you are
- él / ella es – he / she is
- nosotros / nosotras somos – we are
- vosotros / vosotras sois – you all are (Spain)
- ellos / ellas son – they are
When do we use SER?
We use SER to talk about what something is, not how it is or where it is.
1. Descriptions
Use SER for defining characteristics.
- Es alto. → He is tall.
- La casa es grande. → The house is big.
2. Concepts
Use SER for general ideas, facts, and definitions.
- La Luna es un satélite. → The Moon is a satellite.
- Dos más dos son cuatro. → Two plus two are four.
3. Categories
Use SER to classify people or things.
- Es médico. → He is a doctor.
- El perro es un animal. → A dog is an animal.
Key idea to remember
SER defines identity, meaning, and classification.
ESTAR describes condition or location.
If you want, I can next explain ESTAR in the same format, or give you contrast examples (es aburrido / está aburrido).
Identificar el objeto al que nos referimos • La Tierra es el tercer planeta del sistema solar. • Julio César es el gato de Ainhoa.
Here is a clear explanation in English of the idea and the examples you gave.
Identifying the object we are referring to (SER)
We use SER to identify exactly what or who something is.
This means we define or specify the object so there is no doubt about its identity.
Examples
La Tierra es el tercer planeta del sistema solar.
→ The Earth is the third planet of the solar system.
Reason: SER is used to give a scientific identification / definition.
Julio César es el gato de Ainhoa.
→ Julio César is Ainhoa’s cat.
Reason: SER identifies who Julio César is and clarifies the reference.
Key rule
Use SER to say what something is or who someone is.
This includes:
- definitions
- names and identities
- classifications
- ownership and relationships
If you want, I can next show contrasting examples with ESTAR to reinforce the difference.
EL NOMBRE ¿Cómo te llamas? Me Ilamo Paco LA RESIDENCIA ¿Dónde vives? Vivo en Madrid LA PROFESION ¿A qué te dedicas? Soy músico
Here is a clear explanation in English, following your headings exactly.
EL NOMBRE (Name)
¿Cómo te llamas?
→ What is your name?
Me llamo Paco.
→ My name is Paco.
Explanation:
- Llamarse is a reflexive verb used to say someone’s name.
- Spanish normally does not say “I am Paco” in this question; it says “I call myself Paco.”
LA RESIDENCIA (Place of residence)
¿Dónde vives?
→ Where do you live?
Vivo en Madrid.
→ I live in Madrid.
Explanation:
- Vivir is used to talk about where someone lives.
- The preposition en means in.
LA PROFESIÓN (Profession)
¿A qué te dedicas?
→ What do you do? / What is your profession?
Soy músico.
→ I am a musician.
Explanation:
- SER is used for profession.
- In Spanish, professions usually do not need an article (soy músico, not soy un músico).
Summary rule
- Nombre → llamarse
- Residencia → vivir
- Profesión → ser
If you want, I can turn this into a complete dialogue or give you alternative natural answers used by native speakers.
LA EDAD ¿Cuántos años tienes? Tengo 23 años LA NACIONALIDAD ¿De dónde eres? Soy español ProfeDeELE es EL TELÉFONO ¿Cuál es tu número de teléfono? Es el 530 219 492
Here is a clear explanation in English, following your headings and examples.
LA EDAD (Age)
¿Cuántos años tienes?
→ How old are you?
Tengo 23 años.
→ I am 23 years old.
Explanation:
- Spanish uses TENER (to have) for age, not ser.
- Literally: I have 23 years.
LA NACIONALIDAD (Nationality)
¿De dónde eres?
→ Where are you from?
Soy español.
→ I am Spanish.
Explanation:
- SER is used for nationality and origin.
- Nationality adjectives agree in gender: español / española.
(ProfeDeELE es …)
ProfeDeELE es profesor de español.
→ ProfeDeELE is a Spanish teacher.
Explanation:
- SER is used for profession and identity.
EL TELÉFONO (Phone number)
¿Cuál es tu número de teléfono?
→ What is your phone number?
Es el 530 219 492.
→ It is 530 219 492.
Explanation:
- SER is used to identify numbers (time, dates, phone numbers).
Quick summary
- Edad → TENER (Tengo 23 años)
- Nacionalidad → SER (Soy español)
- Profesión / identidad → SER
- Teléfono → SER
If you want, I can now put all personal information together in one short dialogue.
Saludar Hola Buenas Buenos días Buenas tardes Buenas noches
Here is a clear explanation in English of Spanish greetings (saludar).
Saludar (to greet)
Hola
→ Hello
- Neutral and informal
- Used any time of day
Buenas
→ Hi / Hello
- Short, informal greeting
- Very common in everyday speech
- Can be used morning, afternoon, or evening
Buenos días
→ Good morning
- Used from morning until lunchtime
- Formal or informal
Buenas tardes
→ Good afternoon
- Used from after lunch until evening
Buenas noches
→ Good evening / Good night
- Used in the evening and at night
- Also used when saying goodbye before sleeping
Quick tip
Spanish often uses plural forms (buenos, buenas) as fixed expressions in greetings.
If you want, I can also explain how to respond to each greeting or show formal vs informal situations.
¡Cuánto tiempo!
→ Long time no see!
Used when you haven’t seen someone for a long time.
Very common and friendly.
Me alegro de verte
→ I’m happy to see you.
- verte = to see you (informal tú)
Used with friends, classmates, people you know well.
¡Qué gusto verte!
→ What a pleasure to see you!
Slightly more expressive and warm than me alegro de verte.
Informal (tú).
¡Qué alegría verte!
→ What a joy to see you!
Very emotional and positive.
Informal (tú).
Formal versions (usted)
Me alegro de verlo / verla
→ I’m happy to see you.
Used with usted (formal).
- verlo = to see him / you (formal, masculine)
- verla = to see her / you (formal, feminine)
¡Qué gusto verlo / verla!
→ What a pleasure to see you!
Formal and polite.
¡Qué alegría verlo / verla!
→ What a joy to see you!
Formal, warm, and respectful.
Key difference to remember
- verte → informal (tú)
- verlo / verla → formal (usted)
Simple rule
Use these expressions to show happiness when meeting someone again.
Choose tú or usted depending on the level of formality.
If you want, I can now show typical replies like “Igualmente”, “Yo también”, or turn this into a short dialogue.
Preguntar (to ask how someone is)
¿Qué tal (estás)?
→ How are you? / How’s it going?
- Very common and informal
- estás is often omitted because it’s understood
¿Cómo estás?
→ How are you?
- Direct and clear
- Informal (tú)
(Formal: ¿Cómo está usted?)
¿Todo bien?
→ Everything good?
- Very informal
- Often used in quick conversations
¿Qué tal todo?
→ How’s everything?
- Informal, friendly
- Refers to life in general
¿Qué tal te va?
→ How are things going for you?
- Slightly more personal
- Often used when talking about work or life progress
¿Qué hay?
→ What’s up?
- Very informal
- Common among friends and young people
Key idea
All these questions:
- use ESTAR (explicitly or implicitly),
- ask about current state or situation, not permanent identity.
Quick tip
Spanish often drops parts of the sentence:
- ¿Qué tal? = ¿Qué tal estás?
If you want, I can next show typical answers (Bien, regular, fatal, todo bien) or explain formal vs informal replies.
¿Qué te cuentas?
→ What’s new? / What have you been up to?
- Very informal
- Used with friends or close acquaintances
- Asks about news or recent events, not just feelings
¿Qué tal está?
→ How are you?
- Formal (usted)
- Polite and neutral
- Common in professional or respectful contexts
¿Cómo está?
→ How are you?
- Formal and very common
- Direct question about the person’s current state
¿Cómo se encuentra?
→ How are you? / How are you feeling?
- Very formal
- Often used in medical, professional, or respectful situations
- Slightly more concerned about health or well-being
¿Cómo le va?
→ How is it going (for you)?
- Formal
- Focuses more on how things are going in life or work, not just mood
Key differences (simple)
- te → informal (tú): ¿Qué te cuentas?
- está / se encuentra / le va → formal (usted)
- se encuentra → most formal, often health-related
- le va → progress, life, work
Quick rule
Choose tú forms for friends.
Choose usted forms for respect, age, or professional situations.
If you want, I can show typical answers to each question or turn them into short dialogues.
Respuestas (Answers)
Muy bien
→ Very well / Very good
- Strongly positive
- Polite and common in all situations
Bien
→ Well / Fine
- Neutral to positive
- The most common answer
Genial
→ Great / Awesome
- Very positive
- Informal and enthusiastic
Todo bien
→ Everything’s fine / All good
- Informal
- Refers to life in general, not just feelings
Todo genial
→ Everything’s great
- Very positive and informal
- Strong enthusiasm
Usage tip
These answers often stand alone, or you can add gracias:
- Bien, gracias.
- Todo genial, gracias.
Key idea
All these answers describe a current state, so they relate to ESTAR even if the verb is not said explicitly.
If you want, I can also show neutral or negative answers (regular, mal, fatal) or complete short dialogues.
Respuestas neutras o negativas
Bueno…
→ So-so / Well…
- Very common
- Suggests things are not great, but not terrible
- Often said with a pause or sigh
Tirando
→ Getting by / Hanging in there
- Informal
- Implies some difficulties, but managing
- Common in everyday spoken Spanish
Regular
→ So-so / Not very good
- Neutral to slightly negative
- Polite and common
- Can sound a bit serious depending on tone
Usage tip
These answers are often followed by a short explanation:
- Regular, mucho trabajo.
- Tirando, pero bien.
Key idea
All these answers describe current state or situation, so they are linked to ESTAR, even when the verb is omitted.
If you want, I can now show clearly negative answers (mal, fatal, muy mal) or create short dialogues for practice.
No muy bien Mal + (muchas) gracias + ¿y tú? / ¿y usted?
Here is a clear explanation in English of these answers and additions.
Negative answers
No muy bien
→ Not very well
- Polite and soft
- Less strong than mal
- Often used when you don’t want to sound too negative
Mal
→ Bad
- Clear and direct
- Stronger than no muy bien
Adding politeness
Gracias / Muchas gracias
→ Thank you / Thank you very much
- Often added after the answer
- Makes the reply more polite
Examples:
- Bien, gracias.
- Regular, muchas gracias.
- No muy bien, gracias.
Returning the question
¿Y tú?
→ And you?
- Informal (tú)
- Used with friends, classmates, people your age
¿Y usted?
→ And you?
- Formal (usted)
- Used with older people, professionals, strangers
Typical full answers
- Bien, gracias. ¿Y tú?
- Regular, muchas gracias. ¿Y usted?
- Mal, gracias. ¿Y tú?
Key idea
These expressions:
- describe a current state (linked to ESTAR),
- add politeness with gracias,
- keep the conversation going with ¿y tú? / ¿y usted?.
If you want, I can now build complete mini-dialogues using all these expressions together.
lunes, 3 de noviembre [***] 11A38 (A) El diálogo de hoy Shoto: Laura, ¿tus padres trabajan? Louro: Sí, mi padre trabaja en el Teatro Colón. Es violinista.
Here is a clear explanation in English, plus a corrected, natural version in Spanish.
Date and heading
lunes, 3 de noviembre
→ Monday, November 3rd
El diálogo de hoy
→ Today’s dialogue
Dialogue (meaning)
Shoto: Laura, ¿tus padres trabajan?
→ Laura, do your parents work?
- tus padres = your parents
- trabajan = work (plural)
Laura: Sí, mi padre trabaja en el Teatro Colón. Es violinista.
→ Yes, my father works at the Teatro Colón. He is a violinist.
Grammar explanation
- ¿Tus padres trabajan?
Uses trabajar in the present tense, third person plural, because padres is plural. - Mi padre trabaja…
Singular subject → trabaja. - Es violinista
SER is used for profession.
In Spanish, professions usually do not take an article (es violinista, not es un violinista).
Corrected Spanish (small fixes)
You wrote:
Shoto / Louro
To be consistent and natural, it should be:
Laura: Sí, mi padre trabaja en el Teatro Colón. Es violinista.
(Only one speaker name is needed for the answer.)
Key learning points
- SER → profession (es violinista)
- Present tense → daily work (trabaja)
- Plural vs singular matters (trabajan / trabaja)
If you want, I can now:
- expand this into a longer classroom dialogue, or
- explain other family professions using the same structure.
padres 両親/trahajan 動詞trabajar (働く)3人称複数/trabaja 動詞trabajar 3人称単数/en 前置詞〜で/el「定冠詞・男/teatro 男 劇場/el Teatro Colon コロン劇場/violinista 男女同形 バイオリン奏者
Here is a clear explanation in English of each Spanish word and grammar point you listed.
padres
→ parents
Plural noun meaning both father and mother.
trabajan
→ verb trabajar (to work), third person plural
Used with plural subjects like los padres.
Trabajan = they work.
trabaja
→ verb trabajar, third person singular
Used with singular subjects like mi padre.
Trabaja = he/she works.
en
→ preposition meaning in / at
Used for place or location.
Trabaja en el teatro = He works at the theater.
el
→ definite article, masculine singular (the)
Used before masculine nouns.
el teatro = the theater.
teatro
→ masculine noun meaning theater.
el Teatro Colón
→ the Teatro Colón
A proper noun (name of a specific place).
The article el is part of the official name.
violinista
→ violinist
A gender-neutral noun (same form for male and female).
- Es violinista. = He/She is a violinist.
No article is used when talking about profession.
Key grammar points to remember
- Plural subject → plural verb
Los padres trabajan. - Singular subject → singular verb
Mi padre trabaja. - SER + profession (no article)
Es violinista.
If you want, I can now break down the entire dialogue word by word, or make a grammar table for trabajar.
b, v banco bueno, buena スペイン語のbとvは同じ発音です。日本語の「バビブベボ」の発音でOKです。 銀行 bonito, bonita かわいい vaso vacación vista コップ 休暇(スペイン語では通常vacaciones 夜) 見晴らし、眺め vuelo 飛行、フライト
Here is a clear explanation in English of Spanish B and V pronunciation, using your examples.
Spanish letters B and V
In modern standard Spanish, B and V are pronounced the same.
There is no sound difference like English b vs v.
👉 For Japanese learners:
Pronounce both B and V like 「バ・ビ・ブ・ベ・ボ」. That is perfect and correct.
Examples with B
banco
→ bank / bench
Meaning: 銀行
bueno / buena
→ good
Masculine / feminine adjective
bonito / bonita
→ pretty / cute
Meaning: かわいい
Examples with V
vaso
→ glass
Meaning: コップ
vacación / vacaciones
→ vacation
Meaning: 休暇
📌 In Spanish, it is usually plural: vacaciones
vista
→ view / sight
Meaning: 見晴らし、眺め
vuelo
→ flight
Meaning: 飛行、フライト
Important pronunciation note
Although spelled B or V, the sound is the same:
- banco ≈ vanco (same sound)
- vaso ≈ baso (same sound)
Native speakers distinguish them only in spelling, not in pronunciation.
One-sentence rule
In Spanish, B = V in pronunciation.
Use a soft “b” sound, like Japanese バ行.
If you want, I can next explain when the B/V sound is softer between vowels, or give you a list of common B/V words to memorize spelling.
only english please rewrite
Spanish B and V pronunciation (English explanation)
In modern Spanish, the letters B and V are pronounced the same.
There is no difference like in English between b and v.
For Japanese learners, it is perfectly correct to pronounce both B and V like “ba, bi, bu, be, bo.”
Examples with B
- banco – bank
- bueno / buena – good
- bonito / bonita – pretty, cute
Examples with V
- vaso – glass
- vacación / vacaciones – vacation (usually plural: vacaciones)
- vista – view, sight
- vuelo – flight
Important note
Even though the spelling is different (B or V), the sound is the same in Spanish.
Native speakers distinguish them only in writing, not in pronunciation.
Simple rule
In Spanish, B and V sound the same.
定冠詞 el Teatro Colón スペイン語には、英語のtheに相当する定冠詞があります。定冠詞は男性 形・女性形、単数形・複数形があり、後ろに来る名詞の性・数によって形を変えます。 男性単数 el 複数 10s 女性単数la複数 las El Salvador エルサルバドル La Paz ラパス Los Ángeles ロサンゼルス Las Vegas ラスベガス ・話す側と聞く側の双方で特定できる人やモノに使う。 el padre de Laura ラウラの父 los padres de Laura ラウラの両親
Definite articles in Spanish
Spanish has definite articles, equivalent to “the” in English.
They change according to the gender (masculine / feminine) and number (singular / plural) of the noun that follows.
Forms of the definite article
- Masculine singular: el
- Masculine plural: los
- Feminine singular: la
- Feminine plural: las
Example with a place name
el Teatro Colón
→ the Teatro Colón
The article el is used because teatro is a masculine singular noun.
Definite articles with proper names
Some countries, cities, and places are traditionally used with a definite article:
- El Salvador
- La Paz
- Los Ángeles
- Las Vegas
In these cases, the article is part of the conventional name.
When do we use the definite article?
We use the definite article when both the speaker and the listener know exactly which person or thing is being referred to.
Examples
el padre de Laura
→ Laura’s father
(Specific, clearly identified person)
los padres de Laura
→ Laura’s parents
(Specific, clearly identified people)
Key idea
Spanish definite articles agree with the noun in gender and number and are used when the reference is specific and identifiable to both speaker and listener.
If you want, I can next explain when Spanish does NOT use the definite article, even when English does.
la familia de Lauraラウラの家族 las gatas de Laura ラウラの猫(メス・複数) ・全体を指すときに使う。 los japoneses 日本人 los argentinos アルゼンチン人 los uruguayos ウルグアイ人 la gente genteは「人々」を集合的に捉えるので、通常は単数形で使います
Definite article: family, possession, and general groups
Family / possession
la familia de Laura
→ Laura’s family
las gatas de Laura
→ Laura’s cats (female, plural)
Explanation:
- The definite article (la / las) is used because the people or animals are specific and identifiable.
- The article agrees with the gender and number of the noun (familia = feminine singular; gatas = feminine plural).
Using the definite article to refer to a whole group (general meaning)
When talking about an entire people or nationality in general, Spanish uses the definite article + plural.
- los japoneses → the Japanese (people)
- los argentinos → the Argentinians
- los uruguayos → the Uruguayans
Explanation:
- The article indicates a general group as a whole, not specific individuals.
Collective noun: “la gente”
la gente
→ people
Important note:
- gente is a collective noun.
- Even though it means people, it is normally singular in Spanish.
Examples:
- La gente es amable. → People are kind.
- La gente trabaja mucho aquí. → People work a lot here.
Key rules to remember
- Use the definite article for specific, identifiable people or things.
- Use definite article + plural to talk about a whole group or nationality.
- gente is singular in form, even though it has a plural meaning.
・1つしかないモノに使う。 el Sol * la Luna la estacion Retiro (estacion 安駅)レティーロ駅
Using the definite article for unique things
In Spanish, we use the definite article (el / la / los / las) for things that exist only once (unique objects).
Examples
el Sol
→ the Sun
Reason: There is only one Sun.
la Luna
→ the Moon
Reason: There is only one Moon (for Earth).
la Estación Retiro
→ Retiro Station (Buenos Aires)
Reason: It refers to a specific, unique place.
(“estación” = station)
Key rule
Use the definite article when referring to unique or one-of-a-kind things.
This includes:
- celestial bodies (el Sol, la Luna),
- famous or specific places (la Estación Retiro),
- institutions or landmarks known to both speaker and listener.
If you want, I can also explain exceptions or compare this with cases where English does not use “the” but Spanish does.
ar 動詞 Tus padres trabajan. / Mi padre trabaja en el Teatro Colón. trabajar (8) < 単数 14¾ yo trabaio 複数 nosotros, nosotras trabajamos 2人称 tú trabajas trabajáis él 3人称 ella usted trabaia vosotros, vosotras ellos ellas ustedes trabajan ar 動詞の規則活用は、語尾が-0, -aS, -a, -amos, -an と変化します。
-AR verbs (present tense) — example: trabajar (to work)
trabajar is a regular -AR verb.
Regular -AR verbs follow a fixed pattern in the present tense.
Present tense conjugation: trabajar
Singular
- yo trabajo – I work
- tú trabajas – you work (informal)
- él / ella / usted trabaja – he / she / you (formal) work
Plural
- nosotros / nosotras trabajamos – we work
- vosotros / vosotras trabajáis – you all work (Spain)
- ellos / ellas / ustedes trabajan – they / you all work
Examples
- Tus padres trabajan.
→ Your parents work.
(padres is plural → trabajan) - Mi padre trabaja en el Teatro Colón.
→ My father works at the Teatro Colón.
(padre is singular → trabaja)
How regular -AR verbs are formed
- Take the infinitive: trabajar
- Remove -ar → trabaj-
- Add these endings:
- -o → yo
- -as → tú
- -a → él / ella / usted
- -amos → nosotros / nosotras
- -áis → vosotros / vosotras
- -an → ellos / ellas / ustedes
👉 Pattern: -o, -as, -a, -amos, -áis, -an
Key point
Regular -AR verbs always follow this pattern in the present tense.
If you want, I can next show:
- another -AR verb (hablar, estudiar), or
- a quick comparison with -ER / -IR verbs.
(1)講座で流れる主語に合わせて動詞trabajar を活用させてください。 (2) 定冠詞を加えてください。 ショウタのお母さん ラウラの兄弟 私の祖母のレストラン (答えはページ下) madre de Shota hermanos de Laura restaurante de mi abuela (restaurante [ <×+57)
Here are the correct answers, following your two instructions:
(1) Conjugate the verb trabajar according to the subject
(2) Add the definite article
1. ショウタのお母さん
la madre de Shota trabaja
→ Shota’s mother works.
Reason:
- la madre → feminine singular → trabaja (3rd person singular)
- Definite article la because it is a specific, identifiable person
2. ラウラの兄弟
los hermanos de Laura trabajan
→ Laura’s brothers / siblings work.
Reason:
- los hermanos → masculine plural → trabajan (3rd person plural)
- Definite article los because it refers to a specific group
3. 私の祖母のレストラン
el restaurante de mi abuela trabaja ❌
→ This is not natural, because a restaurant does not “work”.
✅ Correct and natural sentence:
el restaurante de mi abuela está abierto
→ My grandmother’s restaurant is open.
Grammar notes:
- el restaurante → masculine singular → definite article el
- estar abierto is the natural verb + adjective for shops/restaurants
Summary of key points
- trabaja / trabajan depend on singular vs plural subject
- Definite articles (el / la / los) are added because the nouns are specific
- Choose the verb according to meaning (people trabajan, places usually están abiertos)
If you want, I can also:
- create more practice questions, or
- explain why some nouns don’t naturally use “trabajar.”
(3)私は東京で働いています。 Yo trabaio en Tokio. / Trabaio en Tokio. (4) あなたはここで仕事をしているのですか?(ここでaca) ¿Trabaja usted acá? / ¿Usted trabaja acá? (5) あなた方はどこで働いているのですか? (どこで dinde) ¿Dónde trabajan ustedes? 一私たちは、私の兄のレストランで働いています。 -Nosotros trabaiamos en el restaurante de mi hermano. (6) ショウタのおじいさんはどこで働いていますか? ¿Dónde trabaja el abuelo de Shota? 一東京駅で働いています。 -El abuelo de Shota trabaja en la estación de Tokio. (7) 君はどこで働いているの? ¿Dónde trabaias? 一私はマリアの店で働いています。(店 negocio 男 = tienda 安) -Trabajo en el negocio de María.
Here are the correct Spanish sentences, with small corrections, and a clear explanation in English for each item.
(3) 私は東京で働いています。
✅ Trabajo en Tokio.
(or Yo trabajo en Tokio.)
Explanation:
- trabajo = 1st person singular of trabajar
- The subject yo is optional in Spanish.
- en Tokio = in Tokyo
(4) あなたはここで仕事をしているのですか?(ここで = acá)
✅ ¿Trabaja usted acá?
(or ¿Usted trabaja acá?)
Explanation:
- Both word orders are correct.
- usted = formal “you” → verb in 3rd person singular
- acá = here
(5) あなた方はどこで働いているのですか?(どこで = dónde)
✅ ¿Dónde trabajan ustedes?
Explanation:
- ustedes = you all → trabajan (plural)
- dónde has an accent because it’s a question word.
Answer: 私たちは、私の兄のレストランで働いています。
✅ Trabajamos en el restaurante de mi hermano.
(or Nosotros trabajamos en el restaurante de mi hermano.)
Explanation:
- trabajamos = nosotros form
- el restaurante → definite article because it’s specific.
(6) ショウタのおじいさんはどこで働いていますか?
✅ ¿Dónde trabaja el abuelo de Shota?
Explanation:
- el abuelo = masculine singular → trabaja
- Definite article el because it’s a specific person.
Answer: 東京駅で働いています。
✅ Trabaja en la estación de Tokio.
(or El abuelo de Shota trabaja en la estación de Tokio.)
Explanation:
- estación is feminine → la estación
- en is used for place of work.
(7) 君はどこで働いているの?(informal)
✅ ¿Dónde trabajas?
Explanation:
- tú form → trabajas
- Subject pronoun is omitted (very common).
Answer: 私はマリアの店で働いています。
✅ Trabajo en el negocio de María.
(or Trabajo en la tienda de María.)
Explanation:
- negocio (masculine) or tienda (feminine) are both correct.
- de María shows possession.
Key grammar reminders
- trabajo / trabajas / trabaja / trabajamos / trabajan depend on the subject
- Subject pronouns (yo, tú, nosotros) are often omitted
- Use definite articles (el, la) for specific people or places
If you want, I can turn these into a listening-style drill or make fill-in-the-blank exercises like in a real class.
only english
Here are the correct Spanish sentences, with explanations in English only, step by step.
(3) “I work in Tokyo.”
Trabajo en Tokio.
(Yo trabajo en Tokio. is also correct.)
Explanation:
- trabajo is the first-person singular form of trabajar.
- The subject yo is optional because the verb form already shows the subject.
- en is used for location (“in”).
(4) “Do you work here?” (formal)
¿Trabaja usted acá?
(¿Usted trabaja acá? is also correct.)
Explanation:
- usted uses the third-person singular verb form.
- acá means “here.”
- Both word orders are grammatically correct.
(5) “Where do you (plural) work?”
¿Dónde trabajan ustedes?
Explanation:
- ustedes is plural → trabajan.
- dónde has an accent because it is a question word.
Answer: “We work at my brother’s restaurant.”
Trabajamos en el restaurante de mi hermano.
Explanation:
- trabajamos matches nosotros.
- el restaurante uses the definite article because it refers to a specific place.
(6) “Where does Shota’s grandfather work?”
¿Dónde trabaja el abuelo de Shota?
Explanation:
- el abuelo is singular → trabaja.
- The definite article el is used for a specific person.
Answer: “He works at Tokyo Station.”
Trabaja en la estación de Tokio.
Explanation:
- estación is feminine → la estación.
- en is used for workplace/location.
(7) “Where do you work?” (informal)
¿Dónde trabajas?
Explanation:
- Informal tú → trabajas.
- The subject pronoun is omitted, which is very common in Spanish.
Answer: “I work at María’s shop.”
Trabajo en el negocio de María.
(Trabajo en la tienda de María. is also correct.)
Explanation:
- Both negocio and tienda mean “shop.”
- de María shows possession.
Key takeaway
- Verb endings change according to the subject.
- Subject pronouns are often omitted.
- Definite articles are used for specific people and places.
martes, 4 de noviembre Lavro: Mi madre enseña inglés en una escuela primaria, es maestra. Shota: Entonces tú hablas bien inglés, ¿verdad?
Here is a clear explanation in English, with translation and key grammar points.
Date
martes, 4 de noviembre
→ Tuesday, November 4th
Dialogue
Laura: Mi madre enseña inglés en una escuela primaria, es maestra.
→ My mother teaches English at a primary school; she is a teacher.
Shota: Entonces tú hablas bien inglés, ¿verdad?
→ So you speak English well, right?
Grammar explanation
- Mi madre enseña…
- enseña = present tense of enseñar (to teach), 3rd person singular
- Used because mi madre is singular.
- en una escuela primaria
- en = in / at
- una = indefinite article (“a”), because it is one school, not a specific named one.
- es maestra
- SER is used for profession.
- No article (una) is used with professions after ser.
- Entonces
- Means so / then, used to show a logical conclusion.
- tú hablas bien inglés
- hablas = present tense of hablar, tú-form
- bien = well
- Languages are not capitalized in Spanish (inglés).
- ¿verdad?
- Means right? / isn’t it?
- Used to confirm information.
Key learning points
- SER → profession (es maestra)
- Present tense → habitual actions (enseña, hablas)
- ¿verdad? → tag question to check agreement
If you want, I can rewrite this as a full classroom conversation or make practice questions using enseñar and hablar.
ensenia 動詞enseniar (教える)3人称単数/ingles 男 英語/escuela 安 学校(主に初等・中等教育の学校、各種学校)/escuela primaria 小学校/ maestra 女 先生、教師(← maestro 男 先生、教師)/entonces それでは/hablas 動詞hablar (話す)2人称単数/bien 上手に、うまく/iverdad? そうだよね?そうでしょう?
Here is a clear explanation in English, with correct spelling and meaning for each item.
enseña
→ verb enseñar (to teach), third person singular
Used with singular subjects like mi madre.
Enseña inglés = She teaches English.
enseñar
→ to teach (infinitive form)
inglés
→ English
Masculine noun.
Languages are not capitalized in Spanish.
escuela
→ school
Used mainly for primary and secondary education, and also for vocational or special schools.
escuela primaria
→ primary school / elementary school
maestra
→ female teacher
- maestra = female
- maestro = male
After ser, professions usually do not take an article:
Es maestra.
entonces
→ so / then
Used to show a logical conclusion.
hablas
→ verb hablar (to speak), second person singular (tú)
Hablas inglés = You speak English.
bien
→ well
Used to describe how well someone does something.
¿verdad?
→ right? / isn’t that so?
A tag question used to confirm information or agreement.
Key correction notes
- ensenia → enseña
- enseniar → enseñar
- ingles → inglés
- iverdad? → ¿verdad?
If you want, I can also explain accent marks (ñ, é) or make a verb table for enseñar and hablar.
・-0で終わる職業名の場合、未尾を-aに変えると女性形になる。 先生(初等教育) maestro, maestra 料理人 cocinero,cocinera 建築家 arquitecto, arquitecta 医師 medico, medica ・-0で終わらない職業名には男女同形のものが多い。 バイオリン奏者 violinista 芸術家 artista サッカー選手 futholista 学生 estudiante 歯科
Here is a clear explanation in English of gender in Spanish profession names, with correct examples.
1) Professions ending in -o
If a profession ends in -o, the feminine form is made by changing -o to -a.
Examples:
- maestro / maestra – teacher (primary education)
- cocinero / cocinera – cook
- arquitecto / arquitecta – architect
- médico / médica – doctor
Rule:
-o → -a to form the feminine.
2) Professions that do NOT end in -o
Many profession names do not change form for masculine and feminine.
They are gender-invariant; gender is shown only by the article (el / la) or context.
Examples:
- violinista – violinist
- artista – artist
- futbolista – soccer player
- estudiante – student
- dentista – dentist
Examples in sentences:
- Él es violinista. → He is a violinist.
- Ella es violinista. → She is a violinist.
- La dentista trabaja aquí. → The (female) dentist works here.
Important note
After SER, professions usually do not take an article:
- Es médica. ✔
- Es violinista. ✔
Es una médica❌ (unless you add extra description)
Key summary
- -o professions → feminine -a
- Non -o professions → same form for both genders
- Gender is shown by article or context, not by the noun itself
If you want, I can next explain exceptions or show how articles change with gender and number.
職菜を言うときは、通常不定冠詞をつけません。 カルロスは医者です。Carlos es medico. アナは経済学者です。 Ana es economista.
Professions in Spanish: no indefinite article
When talking about someone’s profession, Spanish normally does NOT use the indefinite article (un / una).
Examples
Carlos es médico.
→ Carlos is a doctor.
Ana es economista.
→ Ana is an economist.
Explanation
- Spanish uses SER + profession without un / una.
- The profession is treated as a role or identity, not as “one item.”
So:
- Es médico / es economista ✔
Es un médico❌ (not used in simple statements)
When CAN you use un / una?
You can use un / una if you add extra information (description, emphasis, or opinion):
- Es un médico excelente. → He is an excellent doctor.
- Es una economista muy conocida. → She is a very well-known economist.
Rule to remember
SER + profession → no article
Article appears only when the profession is described or specified.
ar動詞 Mi madre enseña inglés. / Tú hablas bien inglés. enseñar hablar 教える 1単 enseño hablo 2H enseñas hablas 3単 enseña habla 1* enseñamos hablamos 2複 enseñáis habláis 3複 ancanan hablan estudiar cantar cocinar 勉強する 料理する estudio canto cOcino estudias cantas cocinas estudia canta cocina estudiamos cantamos cocinamos estudiáis cantáis cocinais estudian cantan cocinan ar動詞の規則活用は、語尾が-0, -aS, -a, -amos, -an と変化します。
-AR verbs in Spanish (present tense) — clear explanation
Spanish -AR verbs follow a regular pattern in the present tense.
Here are correct forms, examples, and the rule.
Examples in sentences
- Mi madre enseña inglés.
My mother teaches English. - Tú hablas bien inglés.
You speak English well.
Verb: enseñar (to teach)
- yo → enseño
- tú → enseñas
- él / ella / usted → enseña
- nosotros / nosotras → enseñamos
- vosotros / vosotras → enseñáis
- ellos / ellas / ustedes → enseñan
Note: ñ and accent marks are important.
Verb: hablar (to speak)
- yo → hablo
- tú → hablas
- él / ella / usted → habla
- nosotros / nosotras → hablamos
- vosotros / vosotras → habláis
- ellos / ellas / ustedes → hablan
More regular -AR verbs
estudiar (to study)
- estudio / estudias / estudia
- estudiamos / estudiáis / estudian
cantar (to sing)
- canto / cantas / canta
- cantamos / cantáis / cantan
cocinar (to cook)
- cocino / cocinas / cocina
- cocinamos / cocináis / cocinan
The regular -AR verb rule
- Take the infinitive (e.g., hablar)
- Remove -ar → habl-
- Add these endings:
- -o (yo)
- -as (tú)
- -a (él / ella / usted)
- -amos (nosotros)
- -áis (vosotros)
- -an (ellos / ustedes)
👉 Pattern: -o, -as, -a, -amos, -áis, -an
Key corrections from your list
- ❌ ancanan → ✅ enseñan
- ❌ cocinais → ✅ cocináis
- Accents matter: enseñáis, habláis, estudiáis, cantáis, cocináis
Summary
Regular -AR verbs always follow the same endings in the present tense.
Once you learn the pattern, you can conjugate hundreds of verbs easily.
If you want, I can add quick drills, fill-in-the-blank practice, or compare -AR vs -ER/-IR verbs.
ちょっとステップアップ ー laburar (働く) 0® Como Argentina tiene muchos inmigrantes italianos, hay influencia en nuestra manera de hablar. イタリア移民の多いアルゼンチンでは、話し方にイタリア語の影響がみられます。 例 働く trabaiarアルゼンチン laburar laburarはイタリア語のlavorare (働く)の借用です。laburarはar 動詞で、laburo, laburas, labura, laburamos, laburanのように規則活用します。 セルヒオは図書館で働いている。 Sergio labura en una biblioteca. (Sergio trabaja en una biblioteca.)
A small step up: laburar (“to work”)
In Argentina, there are many descendants of Italian immigrants, and this has influenced the way people speak Spanish there.
Because of this influence, Argentine Spanish often uses laburar instead of the standard Spanish trabajar.
Origin
- trabajar = to work (standard Spanish)
- laburar = to work (Argentine Spanish, informal)
laburar comes from the Italian verb lavorare (to work).
It is a loanword from Italian.
Verb type and conjugation
laburar is a regular -AR verb, so it follows the normal -AR pattern:
- yo laburo – I work
- tú laburás / laburas – you work
- él / ella labura – he / she works
- nosotros laburamos – we work
- ellos laburan – they work
(In Argentina, vos laburás is very common.)
Example
Sergio labura en una biblioteca.
→ Sergio works in a library.
(Standard Spanish:)
Sergio trabaja en una biblioteca.
Important note
- laburar is informal and mainly used in Argentina (and nearby regions).
- In formal situations or outside Argentina, trabajar is preferred.
Key takeaway
laburar = Argentine, informal
trabajar = standard, neutral Spanish
If you want, I can next explain other Italian-influenced words in Argentine Spanish or compare vos vs tú usage.
〜が上手だ、下手だ Tú hablas bien inglés. ・動詞+bien~をするのが上手だ、~をきちんと行う cantar bien 上手に歌を歌う、歌が上手だ cocinar bien 上手に料理する、料理が上手だ enseñar bien 上手に教える、教えるのがうまい •when + mal 〜をするのが下手だ、〜をきちんと行わない cantar mal cocinar mal enseñar mal ちゃんと歌えない、歌が下手だ ちゃんと料理できない、料理が下手だ 上手に教えない、教えるのが下手だ muy bien muy mal とてもよい、上手であるとても下手だ、ダメだ
Saying “good at / bad at” doing something in Spanish
Spanish often uses verb + bien / mal to say how well someone does an action.
Verb + bien → to do something well / to be good at something
Tú hablas bien inglés.
→ You speak English well.
How it works:
- verb + bien = doing the action correctly or skillfully
Examples:
- cantar bien → to sing well / to be good at singing
- cocinar bien → to cook well / to be good at cooking
- enseñar bien → to teach well / to be good at teaching
Verb + mal → to do something badly / to be bad at something
How it works:
- verb + mal = doing the action poorly or incorrectly
Examples:
- cantar mal → to sing badly
- cocinar mal → to cook badly
- enseñar mal → to teach badly
Meanings:
- does not sing properly
- cannot cook properly
- does not teach well
Adding intensity
- muy bien → very well / very good at
- muy mal → very badly / very poor at
Examples:
- Cantas muy bien. → You sing very well.
- Cocina muy mal. → He/She cooks very badly.
Important distinction
Spanish uses adverbs (bien / mal) with verbs, not adjectives.
- Hablas bien. ✔ (adverb)
Hablas bueno.✘ (incorrect)
Quick rule to remember
Verb + bien / mal = how well an action is done
bien = good at / well
mal = bad at / badly
If you want, I can also explain how this differs from SER bueno/malo or show common mistakes learners make.
(1) ラウラの職業は何ですか?(髪問詞Cual どれ、何) ¿Cuál es la profesión de Laura? / ¿Qué es Laura? Que es Laura?は、話の流れで職業のことを話していると分かる場合に使え ます。 一彼女は学生です。大学で日本語を勉強しています。 (学生 estudiante、大学 universidad 安) -Ella es estudiante. Estudia japonés en la universidad. (2) ラウラのおばあさんの職業は何ですか? ¿Cuál es la profesión de la abuela de Laura? ¿Qué es la abuela de Laura? 一彼女は料理人です。 一彼女は料理がとても上手です。 -Ella es cocinera. -Ella cocina muy bien.
Here is a clear explanation in English, with correct Spanish sentences and why each form is used.
(1) What is Laura’s profession?
¿Cuál es la profesión de Laura?
→ What is Laura’s profession?
¿Qué es Laura?
→ What is Laura?
Explanation:
- ¿Cuál es la profesión…? is explicit and clear.
- ¿Qué es Laura? is also correct when the context makes it clear that you are asking about her profession.
Answer
Ella es estudiante. Estudia japonés en la universidad.
→ She is a student. She studies Japanese at the university.
Grammar points:
- SER + profession → es estudiante (no article).
- estudia = present tense of estudiar.
- en la universidad = specific place → definite article la.
(2) What is Laura’s grandmother’s profession?
¿Cuál es la profesión de la abuela de Laura?
→ What is Laura’s grandmother’s profession?
¿Qué es la abuela de Laura?
→ What is Laura’s grandmother?
Explanation:
- Both questions are correct.
- ¿Qué es…? works because the topic (profession) is understood.
Answer (profession)
Ella es cocinera.
→ She is a cook.
Explanation:
- cocinera is the feminine form of cocinero.
- No article is used after SER with professions.
Additional information (ability)
Ella cocina muy bien.
→ She cooks very well.
Explanation:
- verb + muy bien describes how well someone does an action.
- This sentence talks about skill, not profession.
Key distinctions to remember
- ¿Cuál es la profesión de…? → explicit, formal
- ¿Qué es…? → natural when context is clear
- SER + profession → no article (es estudiante, es cocinera)
- Verb + bien / muy bien → skill or ability (cocina muy bien)
If you want, I can next show common mistakes (e.g., es una estudiante vs es estudiante) or create practice questions of the same type.
¿Cuál es tu profesión? ¿Qué eres tú? あなたの職業は何ですか? -Yo sov -Trabajo en -#LId -#Alt 学習ポイント② 〜が上手だ、下手だ Tú hablas bien inglés. ・動詞+bien~をするのが上手だ、~をきちんと行う cantar bien 上手に歌を歌う、歌が上手だ cocinar bien 上手に料理する、料理が上手だ enseñar bien 上手に教える、教えるのがうまい •when + mal 〜をするのが下手だ、〜をきちんと行わない cantar mal cocinar mal enseñar mal ちゃんと歌えない、歌が下手だ ちゃんと料理できない、料理が下手だ 上手に教えない、教えるのが下手だ muy bien muy mal とてもよい、上手であるとても下手だ、ダメだ です。 で働いています。
Here is a clear, structured explanation in English, based exactly on your content.
Asking about profession
¿Cuál es tu profesión?
→ What is your profession?
This is clear and explicit.
¿Qué eres tú?
→ What are you?
This is also correct when the context is clearly about profession.
How to answer
Using SER (profession / identity)
Yo soy …
→ I am … (doctor, student, teacher, etc.)
Example:
- Yo soy estudiante. → I am a student.
- Soy médico. → I am a doctor.
📌 Note:
- No indefinite article (un / una) is normally used with professions.
Using TRABAJAR (place of work)
Trabajo en …
→ I work in / at …
Examples:
- Trabajo en una escuela. → I work at a school.
- Trabajo en una empresa. → I work at a company.
This answers where you work, not what you are.
Learning point ②: Saying “good at / bad at”
Spanish uses verb + bien / mal to describe how well someone does an action.
Verb + bien
→ to do something well / to be good at something
Tú hablas bien inglés.
→ You speak English well.
Examples:
- cantar bien → to sing well
- cocinar bien → to cook well
- enseñar bien → to teach well
Meaning:
- doing the action properly
- being good at it
Verb + mal
→ to do something badly / to be bad at something
Examples:
- cantar mal → to sing badly
- cocinar mal → to cook badly
- enseñar mal → to teach badly
Meaning:
- not doing the action properly
- being poor at it
Adding intensity
- muy bien → very well / very good at
- muy mal → very badly / very poor at
Examples:
- Cantas muy bien. → You sing very well.
- Cocina muy mal. → He/She cooks very badly.
Important distinction
Spanish uses adverbs (bien / mal) with verbs, not adjectives.
- Hablas bien. ✅
- ❌ Hablas bueno.
Final summary
- ¿Cuál es tu profesión? / ¿Qué eres? → ask about profession
- Soy … → profession / identity
- Trabajo en … → place of work
- verb + bien / mal → skill or ability
If you want, I can next create a model self-introduction combining profession + workplace + skills in one natural answer.
<職業や役職、職場などを表す単語の例) 教員 maestro, -tra, profesor, -ra 公務員 funcionario-ria エンジニア ingeniero, -ra 販売員 vendedor, ra 従業員 empleado.-da支配人、取締役 gerente, -ta デザイナー disenador, -ra 企業主、経営者 empresario. -ria(専業)主夫・主・ amo, -ma de casa 年金生活者 pensionado, -da / jubilado, -da 学校 escuela 安ホテル hotel 男スーパーマーケット supermercado 男病院 hospital 男店、ショップ negocio 男ベーカリー panaderia /企業 empresa 安 市場 mercado 男役所 municipalidad 安
Here is a clear explanation in English of vocabulary related to professions, positions, and workplaces, with gender notes.
Professions / positions
Many profession names change form for masculine and feminine.
- maestro / maestra – teacher (usually primary education)
- profesor / profesora – teacher / professor
- funcionario / funcionaria – public servant / civil servant
- ingeniero / ingeniera – engineer
- vendedor / vendedora – salesperson
- empleado / empleada – employee
- gerente / gerenta – manager, director
- diseñador / diseñadora – designer
- empresario / empresaria – business owner, entrepreneur
Household / employment status
- amo de casa – househusband
- ama de casa – housewife
- pensionado / pensionada – pensioner
- jubilado / jubilada – retired person
Workplaces
Nouns for places have fixed grammatical gender, which must be memorized.
- escuela (feminine) – school
- hotel (masculine) – hotel
- supermercado (masculine) – supermarket
- hospital (masculine) – hospital
- negocio (masculine) – shop / business
- panadería (feminine) – bakery
- empresa (feminine) – company
- mercado (masculine) – market
- municipalidad (feminine) – city hall / municipal office
Important grammar reminders
- After SER, professions usually do not take an article:
- Es ingeniero.
- Es profesora.
- Gender agreement is important:
- Ella es empleada.
- Él es jubilado.
- Workplaces usually use en + definite or indefinite article:
- Trabaja en un hospital.
- Trabaja en la empresa.
Key takeaway
- Professions often change -o / -a for gender.
- Some nouns have fixed gender (escuela, hospital, empresa).
- SER = profession / role
- TRABAJAR EN = place of work
If you want, I can next make example sentences, a gender practice exercise, or a profession–workplace matching drill.