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Question about haberGrammar questions– conjugations, verb tenses, adverbs, adjectives, word order, syntax, etc. |
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Question about haber
anyone know how the word HABER is properly and appropriately used? they say it means "to have." but i already thought that the spanish words for "to have" were TENGO and TIENES. i dont see where the word HABER fits in. can someone provide example sentences illustrating the differences between when and where HABER, TENGO, and TIENES are used? but i often see people put in in sentences where i didnt think it belonged. an example is i couldnt have done it without you. i figured the way to say it would be no he podido hacerlo sin usted. but a majority of people put the word HABERLO in there somewhere after the word podido. they dont even use the word HACERLO. so what does it mean and how and when is it used?
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#2
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The Spanish word for 'to have' is tener. Tengo and tienes are two present tense conjugations of the infinitive tener (to have). Tengo means 'I have' and tienes means 'you have'.
Haber has a few uses. The first one I'll talk about is when it means 'have', or, to be more exact, when it functions as an auxiliary verb in the perfect tense. 'I have studied' is said (yo) he estudiado. The subject pronoun (yo) is optional. That second word is the 1st person singular form of 'haber'. The third word is the past participle form of estudiar (to study). You can find all the perfect tense conjugations here. Look at items 8-14. The other use of 'haber' is the irregular 'hay', which means 'there is' or 'there are' in the present tense. There are other tenses, like había ('there were') and habrá ('there will be'). Here are some examples: I have a car. = Tengo un coche. Do you have a car? = ¿Tienes un coche? I have bought a car. = He comprado un coche. Is there a car in the garage? = ¿Hay un coche en el garaje? I wonder if there's a car in the garage. = ¿Habrá un coche en el garaje? I couldn't have done it without you. = No podía haberlo hecho sin usted. (action occurred in the past) = No podría haberlo hecho sin usted. (conditional action expressed here) This needs a little explaining. The first verb (no podía/no podría) is the "I couldn't" part. To say 'have done', we need to use the perfect tense. Remember, the perfect tense uses the auxiliary verb haber and a past participle. In this case, the English word 'done' is the past participle form of 'to do' (hacer). The Spanish past participle form of hacer is hecho. Haber hecho is the result. So far, we have no podía haber hecho. Now we need to introduce the direct object pronoun 'it' (lo) into the sentence. This can go after the word no, as in no lo podía, or it can be suffixed to haber, as in haberlo, and that is the place I decided to put it. Hope this helps. Last edited by Rusty; July 18, 2008 at 10:53 PM. |
#6
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Rusty, you really know your stuff. It's a pleasure to read your responses.
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auxiliary verb, haber, helping verb |
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