Verbs

Present Simple of 'To Be': Am, Is, Are

Level A1 Verbs
Key idea

The verb 'to be' has three present-simple forms: I am, he/she/it is, and you/we/they are. It links the subject to a noun, an adjective, or a place, as in 'She is a doctor', 'I'm tired', and 'We are friends'. In everyday speech we almost always contract it: I'm, you're, he's, she's, it's, we're, they're. Unlike many languages, English cannot drop this verb, so 'She happy' or 'I from Brazil' is always wrong, you must say 'She is happy' and 'I'm from Brazil'.

Examples

  • I'm tired. the speaker feels tired
  • She is a doctor. her job is doctor
  • We are friends. the people are friends

The full lesson

Everything in the video, in text.

  1. am Β· is Β· are

    the verb you can never skip

    In a lot of languages you can just say she happy or I from Brazil. In English, that's broken β€” and the fix is always the same little verb.

  2. πŸ”‘

    'to be' has three present forms: am, is, are.

    That verb is to be. It's the very first verb you need in English, and it has three present forms. Get these three and you can already build real sentences.

  3. to be

    I am
    you are
    he / she / it is
    we are
    they are

    Here's the whole pattern. I takes am. He, she, and it take is. And you, we, and they take are. Just three forms across every subject.

  4. 'to be' links the subject to…

    what / who
    • a job: a doctor
    • a thing: a student
    how / where
    • a quality: tired, happy
    • a place: at home, from Brazil

    What does to be actually do? It's a linking verb. It connects the subject to who or what they are, to a quality, or to a place.

  5. I am tired.

    I β†’ am

    Let's see it. With I, use am β€” here, linking me to a feeling. I am tired.

  6. She is a doctor.

    she β†’ is

    With she, he, or it, use is. Here it links her to a job. She is a doctor.

  7. We are friends.

    we β†’ are

    With we, you, or they, use are. Here it links us to each other. We are friends.

  8. You are at home.

    you β†’ are

    It works for place too. You takes are, even for one person. You are at home.

  9. It is cold today.

    it β†’ is

    And it takes is β€” for things, weather, the time. It is cold today.

  10. Spoken English contracts it

    full
    • I am
    • she is
    • we are
    • they are
    natural
    • I'm
    • she's
    • we're
    • they're

    Now the part that makes you sound natural. In real speech, English almost always contracts to be. I am becomes I'm, she is becomes she's, we are becomes we're.

  11. She's a doctor.

    she is β†’ she's

    So the doctor sentence, the way people really say it, sounds like this. She's a doctor.

  12. βœ— She happy. / I from Brazil. no verb β€” not English
    βœ“ She is happy. / I'm from Brazil. the linking verb is required

    English always needs am, is, or are.

    Here's the big trap. Many languages drop the verb β€” she happy, I from Brazil. In English you can never leave to be out. The verb has to be there.

  13. Remember

    • I am Β· he/she/it is Β· you/we/they are
    • Always there β€” never 'she happy'
    • Speech contracts it: I'm, she's, we're

    So remember: I am, he, she, it is, and you, we, they are. Never drop it β€” and in speech, contract it.