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 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.
"Que te parece tener que ayudar en casa" translates to "What do you think about having to help at home" in English.
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".
"It is rich" is what it means.