It means, "God has great things for me."
Means "My cat has the biggest balls" PELOTUDO DE MIERDA xD
It means, "You/he/she have/has very old things." Out of its proper context, there's no way to know which is the intended/actual subject-verb combination.
Las Cosas Pequenas means '' The Small Things''
Muy Grandes means Very Large Muy means Very - Grandes means Large
LO SIENTOEN ESTA FRASE USTED TIENE COSAS QUE TRADUCEN, TAMBIÉN USTED TIENE COSAS QUE DONT TRADUCENSOY DE MÉXICO Y NO TENGO NI IDEA LO QUE ESTE SIGNIFICA¡EN OTRAS PALABRAS SU FRASE NO TIENE SENTIDO!I didn't know if you were Mexican or not so here it is in EnglishI'M SORRYIN THIS PHRASE YOU HAVE THINGS THAT DON'T TRANSLATE, ALSO YOU HAVE THINGS THAT DON'T TRANSLATEI AM FROM MEXICO AND I DO NOT HAVE AN IDEA WHAT THIS MEANSIN ANOTHER WORDS HIS PHRASE HAS NO SENSE!.
Things that you have
Things are boring/down today. But thank God, He has put people in my life to motivate me.
"Que tiene" in Spanish translated to "what he/she/it has/you have" "Tiene" is the he/she/it/you(formal) conjugation of the Spanish verb "tener" which means "to have", therefore "tiene" means "he, she or it has/you have" "Que" can either mean "what" or "that" "Que tiene?" as a question means "What does he/she/it/you have?" "....que tiene" in the middle of a sentence usually means "that/which he/she/it has/you have". 'tener que' = 'to be obliged/have to' 'que tiene que' = 'which/who is/are obliged//has/have to'
Él tiene means: he has. It is phrase and not a complete sentence.
He has.
Tiene
'Hay las cosas....etc = There are things I want you to do