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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