"Yo tomo el café con menos leche"--why is "tomo" shown as "have" in the English translation? It is a very common phrase in English to say "I take my coffee with . . . ," so was there a reason to change it to "here?"
tomo--why "here?"
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Kwiziq Q&A regular contributor
tomo--why "here?"
This question relates to:Spanish lesson "Using más/menos for more/less/fewer in Spanish (as adjectives, pronouns and adverbs)"
Asked 2 years ago
John O. Kwiziq Q&A super contributor
Hola William,
I think there is a typo "have" not "here."
You should check out the lesson link below: Using the verb tomar for having food/drink
Saludos. John
InmaNative Spanish expert teacher in Kwiziq
Hola William
tomar is a very common verb that we use when we talk about eating and drinking. You can also say "have" in English as far as I know. You can´t always say "take" though, for example:
I am having (taking ???) a coffee with my friends.
Estoy tomando café con mis amigos.
We had (took ???) some ice-creams.
Tomamos unos helados.
Saludos
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