Spanish 101 · Grammar

Tener expressions

Spanish often uses tener where English uses “to be” + adjective — learn the chunks, not word-for-word translation.

The rule

High-frequency patterns: tener hambre/sed/frío/calor, tener sueño, tener prisa, tener razón, tener cuidado, tener éxito, tener X años.

Conjugate tener (tengo, tienes, tiene, tenemos, tenéis, tienen) — irregular stem in most present forms.

Some expressions use hacer for weather (Hace frío) vs. tener for personal feel (Tengo frío) — both appear in textbooks.

Tengo diecinueve años — never *Soy diecinueve* for age.

Tenemos prisa porque el autobús sale pronto.We are in a hurry because the bus leaves soon.

¿Tienes sed? Hay agua en la mochila.Are you thirsty? There is water in the backpack.

Examples in context

Estudio español todos los días.I study Spanish every day.present habit
¿Puedes ayudarme con la tarea?Can you help me with the homework?request
Voy a la biblioteca después de clase.I go to the library after class.movement
No entiendo esta palabra.I do not understand this word.negation
Me gusta la música latina.I like Latin music.gustar
Tenemos clase mañana a las nueve.We have class tomorrow at nine.tener + noun
¿Dónde está el aula?Where is the classroom?estar — location
Es un examen difícil.It is a difficult exam.ser — description

Quick reference

Age

tener + number + años

Need / urge

tener que + infinitive (obligation)

States as “having”

tener hambre, miedo, sueño…

Common mistakes

Wrong agreement

❌ Wrong: La problema es fácil.

✅ Correct: El problema es fácil.

Problema is masculine despite ending in -a.

Double subjects

❌ Wrong: Yo soy yo estudiante.

✅ Correct: Soy estudiante.

Drop redundant subject pronouns when the verb ending is clear.

Negation placement

❌ Wrong: Entiendo no.

✅ Correct: No entiendo.

Place no immediately before the conjugated verb.

Literal word order

❌ Wrong: ¿Qué hora es qué?

✅ Correct: ¿Qué hora es?

Keep standard question frames; do not copy English order.

Practice questions

Test what you just learned. Select an answer to see instant feedback.

Question 1 of 5

Tengo diecinueve años. (How do you say “I am 19” in Spanish?)

Question 2 of 5

Después de correr, _____ sed.

Question 3 of 5

Mis padres _____ prisa porque el tren sale pronto.

Question 4 of 5

¿_____ razón o no?

Question 5 of 5

Hoy _____ mucho frío afuera.

Want more practice on Tener expressions?

Chapurra has 50 questions like these, organized by chapter. Capítulo Preliminar is free.

Start practicing free →

FAQ

How do I know if a verb is stem-changing?
Your vocabulary list or textbook marks e→ie, o→ue, e→i, etc. Changes usually appear in the boot shape of present indicative (not nosotros/nosotras in many -ar/-er verbs). There is no single rule from the infinitive alone—you learn per verb or family.
Why is the yo form sometimes irregular while tú looks regular?
Verbs like hacer (hago) or salir (salgo) add supporting letters or change stems only for yo in the present. The rest of the singular/plural pattern may follow the regular endings. Drill yo alongside ellos because those forms are the most exam-visible.
What is ir a + infinitive?
It is a common periphrasis for near future: Voy a estudiar = I am going to study. Conjugate ir, keep a, and add the unchanged infinitive. It is not the same as the simple future tense learned later.
When can I use the present progressive?
Estar + gerund stresses that an action is in progress right now: Estoy leyendo. Spanish does not use it for stative verbs the way English might (*Estoy queriendo is odd). Follow your book’s list of verbs that prefer simple present.
How do reflexive pronouns line up?
They match the subject: me, te, se, nos, os, se. They usually come before a conjugated verb or attach to an infinitive/command: Me lavo las manos; Voy a lavarme. Placement rules parallel other object pronouns.