As a declarative: The store has dictionaries.
As an interrogative: Does the store have dictionaries?
The store has dictionaries.
"Siempre tiene razón" translates to "He/she is always right" in English.
"A girl who has a brother."
It translates to "He/She has a sister" in English.
You can say "Do you speak English?" in English. In French, you would say "Parlez-vous anglais?" In Spanish, you would say "¿Hablas inglés?"
You say "hello" in English.
Tiene lucemia. (He/She/It has leukemia.) Tiene lucemia? (Does he/she/it have leukemia?)
'Tienda' can be variously translated as the nouns 'tent', 'awning', "ragtop", 'shop', and 'store', depending on the context.
"Tiene" is the third person singular form of the verb "tener". It means "you/he/she has".
It means she is thirsty. Literally translates to "She has thirst."
As a declarative: It has sleeves. As an interrogative: Does it have sleeves?
It means "Who has an accident?"
That is Spanish for "How many rooms does it have?"
It means "what does the boy have?"
It is the same in French, English, and Spanish: boutique (a specific type of store or tienda).
"A girl who has a brother."
tienda de ropa
That would be, "Esa lucecita tiene que brillar." It means, "That little light has to shine."