Are you hot (temperature)
I think it means 'you have a beer for me' tiene usted = you have (I think??)cerveza=beer para mi= for me
Usted is a word in Spanish language that is a formal term for the English word "you", as you would refer to someone of honor or respect. The Spanish word "tu" is the informal term for the English word "you" that two friends would use when speaking to each other.
literally, "heat in the west"
It literally translates to "to have heat". However, when it is used in a sentence, it describes something as "being hot". If it is 100 degrees outside, you could say, "Yo tengo calor" to say "I am hot". Or you can say "Tener calor" to describe the general outside temperature. If the dog is panting, you could say, "El perro tiene calor" to say that "The dog is hot".
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'.
I think it means 'you have a beer for me' tiene usted = you have (I think??)cerveza=beer para mi= for me
"Usted tiene" means "you have" in Spanish. It is a formal way of addressing someone, similar to saying "you" in English but with a more polite tone.
Usted is a word in Spanish language that is a formal term for the English word "you", as you would refer to someone of honor or respect. The Spanish word "tu" is the informal term for the English word "you" that two friends would use when speaking to each other.
It means, "Do you have grandparents?"
Cause que usted tenga calor entonces usted Le tiene frío Es sí entonces usted es no Usted Está en entonces usted está fuera Usted Está arriba entonces usted es hacia abajo
I know that you have a wife, but I think I love you
You don't have to love anybody.
"Tiene" comes from the Spanish verb, "Tener":Tener= to have; be with ageyo tengo nosotros(as) tenemostu tienes vosotros(as) teneisel, ella, usted tiene ellos, ellas, ustedes tienen--------------------------------------------------------Therefore, the form of "tiene" can also mean it has. So when saying "Un ano tiene", means He/she is one year old. It litterally means He/she has one year. But without the "~" over the "n" in "ano", it means "anus", which without the "n" would mean: It has an anus or he/she has an anus.
Él tiene means: he has. It is phrase and not a complete sentence.
"No tiene" in English means "he/she/it doesn't have" or "you (formal) don't have."
"Usted gana" translates to "you win" in English.
Who can ask that? just imagine!How many anuses have you got? X - @"ano" and "año" have totally different meanings.IF you ask "¿Cuántos anos tiene usted?" people would laugh or they could even hit you!