Using,the,Irregular,Spanish,Ve education Using the Irregular Spanish Verb Tener - To Have
Some forms of parent involvement with the school such as communications with school, volunteering, attending school events and parent--parent connections appeared to have little effect on student achievement, especially in high school. Helpi Translation jobs are undertaken by professional translators who are well versed with at least two languages.Translation can work at two levels: inter-state or regional language translation and inter-national or foreign language translation.
It is inevitable that you will use the verb tener which means 'to have', from quite an early stage of your Spanish studies as it is one of the most commonly used verbs in the Spanish language. It is a particularly useful verb as it is used not only to indicate possession but it is also used in a number of idiomatic expressions that indicate emotions or states of being.In English the verb -to have- is used to describe possession but can also be used as an auxiliary verb, for example; -I have a car- (possessive) and -I have seen a car- (auxiliary use).In Spanish however, although tener means -to have- it is only used as the possessive variation of the verb and the verb 'haber', also meaning to have, is used as the auxiliary verb.Tener follows the following format in the present tense:Singular:(Yo) tengo I have(Tú) tienes you have (familiar)(Él, Ella) tiene he/she has(Usted) tiene you have (polite)Plual: (Nosotros) tenemos we have(Vosotros) tenéis you have (plural familiar)(Ellos, Ellas) tienen they have(Ustedes) tienen you have (plural polite)You may have noticed that the forms above are preceded by a subject pronoun in brackets this is because in Spanish the subject pronoun is very rarely used apart from when ambiguity needs to be avoided, however in most if not all South and Latin American countries the subject pronoun is used all the time.As you can see from the formation of the verb table above, tener uses the same verb endings as a regular -er verb, which are -o, -es, -e, -emos, -éis and -en but it has irregularities in the stem of all singular forms and the plural form they and you (polite).Tener is used pretty much in the same way as the English possessive verb- to have, however expressions using tener are quite common and can be quite confusing, as the following list highlights with the literal translation followed by the english meaning..tener hambre to have hunger or, to be hungrytener sed to have thirst or, to be thirstytener calor to have heat or, to be hottener frío to have cold or, to be coldtener miedo to have fear or, to be afraidtener razón to have right or, to be righttener lugar to have place or, to take placetener suerte to have luck or, to be luckytener sueño to have sleep or, to be sleepySo, if you were to say for example, -I am hungry- you would actually say -tengo hambre- (I have hunger)
Using,the,Irregular,Spanish,Ve