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Are "tener que" and "tener de qué" interchangeable?

 

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Old June 20, 2023, 09:35 PM
createdamadman createdamadman is offline
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Are "tener que" and "tener de qué" interchangeable?

I have the sentence below and it is the second time I've seen the "tener de qué" form used in the story I'm reading. Could "tener que (tienes que)" be used here as well, or are there times when "tener de qué" must be used?

"No tienes de qué preocuparte."
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  #2  
Old June 20, 2023, 11:10 PM
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wrholt wrholt is offline
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"No tienes de qué preocuparte" = "You have nothing to worry about."

"No tienes que preocuparte" = "You don't have to worry."

"Tener que" and "tener de qué" are not synonymous expressions, and the surface meanings of these two sentences are different.

Last edited by wrholt; June 20, 2023 at 11:13 PM.
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Old June 20, 2023, 11:26 PM
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Cross-posting:

These phrases are not interchangeable, since they have two distinct meanings.

tener que (hacer algo) = estar obligado (a hacer algo) = have to do something / must do something

tener de qué (infinitivo) = tener por qué (infinitivo) = have a reason (for doing something)


These are affirmative examples. Yours are negative (the opposite of what I wrote).
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