A1

Estar (to be) - Present in Portuguese

O Verbo Estar - Presente

Overview

The verb estar (to be) in the present tense is a beginner (CEFR A1) concept that complements ser. While ser expresses permanent qualities, estar is used for temporary states, locations of physical objects, feelings, conditions, and progressive tenses.

Estar is irregular in the present tense: estou, estás, está, estamos, estais, estão. It appears in everyday expressions like Como estás? (How are you?), Estou bem (I'm fine), and Estou em casa (I'm at home).

Together with ser, estar forms the two-verb system for "to be" that is characteristic of Portuguese and other Romance languages. The ability to choose correctly between them is fundamental to sounding natural in Portuguese.

How It Works

Present tense conjugation of estar:

Person Form Example
eu estou Estou em casa. (I'm at home.)
tu estás Como estás? (How are you?)
ele/ela/você está Está frio hoje. (It's cold today.)
nós estamos Estamos cansados. (We're tired.)
vós estais Estais prontos? (Are you ready?)
eles/elas/vocês estão Estão em Lisboa. (They're in Lisbon.)

Main uses of estar:

  1. Location (of people/things): O livro está na mesa. (The book is on the table.)
  2. Temporary states: Estou doente. (I'm sick.)
  3. Feelings/emotions: Estou contente. (I'm happy.)
  4. Weather (temporary): Está a chover. (It's raining.)
  5. Results of actions: A porta está aberta. (The door is open.)
  6. Progressive tenses: Estou a estudar. (PT) / Estou estudando. (BR) (I'm studying.)
  7. Temporary appearance: Estás muito bonita hoje. (You look very pretty today.)

Examples in Context

Portuguese English Note
Estou em casa. I am at home. location
Como estás? How are you? state/feeling
A sopa está fria. The soup is cold. temporary state
Estamos cansados. We are tired. feeling
O João está doente. João is sick. temporary condition
A porta está fechada. The door is closed. result of action
Está calor hoje. It's hot today. weather
Estou a trabalhar. I'm working. progressive (PT)
Estou trabalhando. I'm working. progressive (BR)
Eles estão no escritório. They are at the office. location

Common Mistakes

Using ser for location of objects/people

  • Wrong: O livro é na mesa.
  • Right: O livro está na mesa.
  • Why: Physical location of people and things uses estar. Only events use ser for location (A festa é no hotel).

Confusing temporary and permanent states

  • Wrong: Ela é cansada. (meaning she is tired right now)
  • Right: Ela está cansada.
  • Why: Tiredness is a temporary state. Ser cansada would mean she is a tiring person or habitually tired by nature.

Using estar for inherent qualities

  • Wrong: Lisboa está em Portugal. (geographic fact)
  • Right: This is actually correct! Fixed geographic location uses estar (or ficar).
  • Why: Even though Portugal's location is permanent, physical location still uses estar (or ficar). This is an exception to the temporary/permanent rule.

Forgetting estar in progressive tenses

  • Wrong: Eu estudo agora. (meaning "I'm studying now")
  • Right: Estou a estudar agora. (PT) / Estou estudando agora. (BR)
  • Why: For an action in progress at the moment, use the progressive form with estar.

Usage Notes

The main difference between Brazilian and European Portuguese with estar is in the progressive construction. European Portuguese uses estar a + infinitive (Estou a comer), while Brazilian Portuguese uses estar + gerund (Estou comendo). Both are perfectly correct within their respective variants.

In informal Brazilian Portuguese, is a very common contraction of está: Tá bom (OK), Tá frio (It's cold), Onde cê tá? (Where are you?). In Portugal, similar contractions exist in rapid speech but are less frequent in standard conversation.

Practice Tips

  1. Practice the estar/ser distinction with adjectives that change meaning: ser rico (be wealthy) vs. estar rico (taste delicious); ser mau (be evil) vs. estar mau (feel unwell).
  2. Use estar + emotion adjectives as daily practice: each morning, describe how you feel in Portuguese using estou.
  3. Pick one variant for progressive tenses (Brazilian gerund or European a + infinitive) and use it consistently until it becomes automatic.

Related Concepts

Prerequisite

Subject Pronouns in PortugueseA1

Concepts that build on this

More A1 concepts

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