No. It should be first person plural: "tenemos" instead of "tiene".
"Tienes" means "you have." It stems from the infinitive form "tener," which is a stem changing verb.
"To have" is "tener". If used as part of a compound verb use (perfect tense), it is "haber". The present tense conjugations are: I have - yo tengo You have - usted tiene (tu tienes) We have - Nosotros tenemos They have - Ellos tienen
The Spanish verb tener means "to have". It is one of the irregular verbs, so the conjugations must be memorized. They are tengo, tienes, tiene, tenemos, teneis, and tienen.
The sentence 'No es lo que usted nacio pero lo que usted lo tiene en usted mismo para ser' means It isn't what you're born with but what you have within your very self to be. In the word-by-word translation, the adverb 'no' means 'not'. The verb 'es' means '[he/she/it] is'. The conjunction 'lo que' means 'what'. The personal pronoun 'usted' means 'you'. The verb 'nacio' means '[you/he/she/it] was born, were born'. The conjunction 'pero' means 'but'. The object pronoun 'lo' means 'it'. The verb 'tiene' means '[you/he/she/it] has'. The preposition 'en' means 'in'. The adjective 'mismo' means 'same, very'.
tengo sed = I am thirsty tienes/usted tiene sed = you are thirsty
The verb is "tiene," which is the third person singular conjugate of the verb "tener" which means "to have."
"Tiene" is the third person singular form of the verb "tener". It means "you/he/she has".
"Tuve" is the past tense conjugation of the verb "tener" in Spanish, which means "to have." It translates to "I had" in English.
"Tienes" means "you have." It stems from the infinitive form "tener," which is a stem changing verb.
Tiene - He has/She has From the verb Tener Tengo - I have Tienes - You have Tiene - He/She has Tenemos - We have Teneís - You (plural, like you guys, y'all) have Tienen - They have Ella tiene un libro. - She has a book.
"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'
That is a harder question than it seems. As a verb of posession, i.e. "he/she/it has something", the verb used would be "tener". The third person singular present form "has" would be "tiene". "Él tiene algo". As part of a compound verb, i.e. "he/she/it has done something", the verb used is "haber". In this case, "Él ha hecho algo".
Depending on the context, correct is already a verb. For example, the action "to correct someone" or "to correct spelling" is an action and therefore a verb.
Tiene (possesses) ha (as auxiliary verb in e.g. 'has been' 'has lived' etc.)
The correct past tense verb is hid.The correct present perfect verb is has hidden.
done is a verb but the correct verb is did - he did.
Tessellate is a verb. You were correct