It means she is thirsty. Literally translates to "She has thirst."
Tiene sed means he/she is thirsty is English.
tengo sed = I am thirsty tienes/usted tiene sed = you are thirsty
Sed in English means but.
Tener means: to have. Ex: Yo tengo un auto rojo: I have a red car. There is a group of 'tener' idioms that do not translate directly as 'to have.' Example: Yo tengo hambre: I am hungry. Yo tengo sed: I am thirsty. Él tiene suerte: He is lucky.
tamen, sed, quod, ceterum, autem, at
Tengo sed, which means I have thirst is more common. Yo soy sediento literally means I am or I'm thirsty. To apply that to other subjects, you need to conjugate tener to the subject. So tener sed means 'to have thirst', so if you want to say "you are thirsty" you would conjugate 'tengo' into 'tienes', so you would say "Tu tienes sed."
tengo sed = I am thirsty tienes/usted tiene sed = you are thirsty
Él tiene mucha sed
Sed in English means but.
Translation:Leonardo is a very patient person, he is very hungry, he is very thirsty.
Sed is "thirst" Tener sed means "To be thirsty". For example: Tengo sed is 'I'm thirsty'.
"Sed" is not an English word - what exactly are you trying to ask?
tienes sed = you are thirsty tengo sed = I am thirsty
But the book's.
Thirst
What the hell did it say?
Galco
i am thirsty for your love