Tengo que irme. It requires no punctuation other than the period and the capital T on tengo.
"bueno, tengo que..." means Good, I have to... [insert action here]
"Yo tengo que estudiar" translates to "I have to study" in English.
"To do lo que tengo es Dios" translates to "All that I have is God" in English.
¿Tienes que estudiar? means "Do you have to study?" The two possible proper answers to this question are: Yes, I have to study (Sí. Tengo que estuduar) No. I don't have to study. (No. No tengo que estudiar)
hablas espanol tambien tengo buscando par alguien que habla sepanol a practicar con
To say 'I have to go' in Spanish, you would say 'Tengo prisa.' You could also say "Tengo que irme", or "Necesito ir".
TENGO QUE IRME OR ME TENGO QUE IR. .
I have to go
Tengo que irme.
Tengo que irme.
It means "I've got to go." "Tengo que irme" means "I have to leave". "Irme" is the reflexive for of the verb "ir", which means "to go". When "irse" is used, it changes the meaning to "to leave".
If you mean "I have to go" in the sense that you are telling someone that you have to leave (to go somewhere), it would be "tengo que irme."
literal is i have to go on monday? or i must go on monday ?
Tengo que irme. Te quiero.
That comes from "irse" which means to leave. Irme would mean I leave, but it would have to be used after a conjugated verb. For example, "Tengo que irme" would mean I need to leave. To say I leave you would use "Me voy."
You say 'Debo irme' or 'Me tengo que ir' (The last one being a bit less formal).
The question is "Do you go to class everyday" so you can say yes (sí), no (no), or give a more in depth explaination like "Sí, pero los lunes tengo que irme antes."