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Special uses of tener, deber, and haber

Tener

It should be mentioned that, although tener means "to have," it is usually used in the sense of "to possess," and it is never used, such as haber, as an auxiliary verb in a compound tense.

tener...años — to be...years old
tener ganas de... — to feel like...
tener calor — to be warm/hot
tener miedo — to be afraid
tener cuidado — to be careful
tener razón — to be right
tener frío — to be cold
tener sed — to be thirsty
tener hambre — to be hungry
tener sueño — to be sleepy

Examples:

Deber

Haber

The primary use of haber is as an auxiliary verb in the construction of compound verbs, but the other uses of the verb are the subject of this segment.

See also

Tener, irregular verb
Haber, irregular verb
Verbs