It means: "one must..."
Have to and must
1. Se Prohibe 2. hay que 3. hay que 4. Se Prohibe 5. hay que
que es su pregunta
It means: he/she/you need to
La diferencia es que la imagen prediseñada ya esta lista para usarse y modificarse, pero la imagen no lo esta. Habra que quitarle todos los formatos a la imagen para hacer esto.
Have to and must
The cast of Lo que hay que tener - 1995 includes: Leticia Sabater as Herself - Hostess
Tener que = "to have to".
tener que hacer (infinitivo)
"Que te parece tener que ayudar en casa" translates to "What do you think about having to help at home" in English.
"que hay" might mean: that there areif it's a question it might mean: what is there?if you accidentally mixed up the order and you meant "hay que," that means: it is necessary.
Ay! que bonita = Hey, how beautiful you are ! ('Hay' = 'there is/are')
"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'
because I always want what you can not
Tener que plus an infinitive means "to have to" whatever the verb is. Tengo que ir= I have to go.
It depends on context. If you mean possession of something, then the verb would be "tener". If you mean "to have to" , it is "tener que". For the formation of perfect tenses, i.e "I have gone to the store", then the verb is "haber".
no hay nada que hacer: it's not relevant; that's not the point no hay nada que hacer con: it has nothing to do with...