'You have'
'teneis' refers (informally) to several people (vosotros)
'tienes' would refer (informally) to one person (tu)
'tiene' would refer (formally) to one person (usted)
'tienen' would refer (formally) to several people (ustedes)
Tienes/teneis clases hoy (informal singular/plural) (accent on final 'e' in 'teneis')
to have (possess) = tener (tengo/tienes/tiene/tenemos/teneis/tienen) 'have' as auxiliary verb, e.g. 'I have eaten my lunch' = haber (ho/has/ha/hemos/habeis/han) The bracketed words show the verb-forms for I/you//he/she/it//we/you/they.
dog
afuras is not a spanish word.
It is the Spanish word for "fox".
"quidera" is not a Spanish word.
"Coll" is not a Spanish word.
gaka is not a Spanish word
The word for "after" in Spanish is "después".
I think what you mean is "What is the Spanish word for let?" because the word "let" is an English word, not Spanish. The Spanish word for "to let" is permitir. "Let me" is "permítame."
quest is not a Spanish word.
Nuxe is not a Spanish word.