Vous chantez : présent
<span>you sing: present
"vous êtes chantez" does not exist, it is said you sang (past tense)
<span>you understand?
<u>CHANTER (present)</u>
Je chante
Tu chantes
Il, elle,on chante
Nous chantons
Vous chantez
Ils, elles chantent
<u>CHANTER (passé composé)</u>
J'ai chanté
Tu as chanté
Il, elle on a chanté
Nous avons chanté
Vous avez chanté
Ils, elles ont chanté
</span></span>
What unit is this I did this before?
B I think is the correct answer
Est means "is" or "are" in French, while c'est translates to "it is", "this is", or "that is". C'est is a contraction of ce est, ce meaning "this" "that" and/or "it", and est meaning "is" (as stated above).
Some examples in sentences:
C'est très drôle. - "This/That/It is very funny."
<span>C'est complètement correct. - "This/That/It is completely correct."
</span><span>Tu est prêt. - "You are ready."
</span>Il est fatigué. - "He is tired."
However, despite est translating to both "is" and "are", c'est never means "those/these are"; the correct form is ces sont.
<span>Ces (chaussures) sont sales. - "Those (shoes) are dirty."</span>