According to Google translator, "Ay tengo" means "Oh, my."
No seriously, that's what it says. "Oh my."
On the other hand, "Lo tengo" means "I have it." (learned in eighth grade Spanish class)
If you mean 'I have (got)/I possess' - tengo (TENGaw) If you mean 'I have' as part of past tense, e.g. 'I have (visited Spain)' - he (visitado espana) (ay bissiTAHdaw essPAHnyah)
If you mean 'I have (got)/I possess' - tengo (TENGaw) If you mean 'I have' as part of past tense, e.g. 'I have (visited Spain)' - he (visitado espana) (ay bissiTAHdaw essPAHnyah)
I do not have
Tengo means 'i have' if you had the phrase 'Tengo un problema' that would mean in english, 'i have a problem'
"Tengo el perro" translates to "I have the dog" in English.
Tengo is a Japanese name. You might mean 'tengou' which would mean 'prank'.
no, no tengo, translated to English means: no, I do not have it.
Tengo translated to English means 'I have.'"Tengo" means "I have".
"Cuando tengo" translates to "when I have" in English.
i have"I have"
Two choices: (1) Sí, tengo hambre; (2) No, no tengo hambre.
That should be spelled "Tengo más". It means "I have more".