Dialogue

Lesson Transcript

Do you know how to talk about health problems in Spanish?
Welcome to Three Step Spanish Practice by SpanishPod101.com. In this lesson, you will practice how to talk about health problems.
Let's look at the main dialogue.
Two people are having a conversation.
Lucas, no te ves bien.
¿Qué te pasa?
"Lucas, you don't look well.
What's wrong?"
Me duele la cabeza.
También me duele el estómago.
"My head hurts.
My stomach hurts too."
¿Tienes fiebre?
"Do you have a fever?"
In this conversation, this character
Asks, "Do you have a fever?"
You can use the pattern tener + noun to describe common health conditions or symptoms in Spanish. This structure is used to say that someone "has" a condition, like fever, pain, or a headache.
Unlike English, Spanish often uses tener to talk about physical states or sensations. So instead of saying "I am cold," you say Tengo frío — literally, "I have cold."
This pattern works with a wide range of health-related nouns, from conditions like gripe "flu" to sensations like hambre "hunger" or dolor de cabeza "headache."
The verb tener, meaning "to have," is an irregular verb in Spanish, so its forms don't follow the regular conjugation rules.
In the present tense, we say
tengo for "I have,"
tienes for "you have" (informal),
tiene for "he/she/you (formal) has,"
tenemos for "we have," and
tienen for "they/you all have."
Let's practice this grammar more in this lesson.

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