The verb tener is irregular and is one of the most useful verbs in Spanish. It means "to have" and is used for possessions, age, and many expressions.
Tener is an irregular verb. Notice the stem change from "ten-" to "tien-":
| yo | tengo (I have) |
| tú | tienes (you have) |
| él/ella/usted | tiene (he/she has) |
| nosotros | tenemos (we have) |
| vosotros | tenéis (you all have) |
| ellos/ellas | tienen (they have) |
Notice that only nosotros and vosotros keep the regular stem "ten-".
Use tener to say what you or someone else has:
Tengo un gato. = I have a cat.
¿Tienes hermanos? = Do you have siblings?
Ella tiene dos hijos. = She has two children.
Nosotros tenemos una casa grande. = We have a big house.
In Spanish, you use tener + number + años to say how old someone is. The word "años" means "years":
Tengo dieciocho años. = I am eighteen years old. (literally: I have eighteen years)
¿Cuántos años tienes? = How old are you?
Mi hermano tiene veintitrés años. = My brother is twenty-three years old.
Spanish uses tener + noun for feelings and sensations that English expresses with "to be":
Tengo hambre. = I am hungry.
¿Tienes sed? = Are you thirsty?
Can you identify the correct tener conjugation?
Yo (tener) un libro. → tengo
Ellos (tener) dos gatos. → tienen
¿Cuántos años (tú/tener)? → tienes
Nosotros (tener) hambre. → tenemos
Traps for English speakers
These are the errors English speakers make most often.