意味
Asking if someone possesses something.
文化的背景
The 'Sie' vs 'Du' distinction is very important. Even neighbors who have lived next to each other for 20 years might still use 'Haben Sie' if they haven't explicitly agreed to 'Du-zen' (use du). Austrians are often considered slightly more formal or traditional with titles. You might hear 'Haben Sie, Herr Doktor...?' more frequently than in Berlin. In Swiss German (Schwiizerdütsch), the formal 'Sie' is used similarly to High German, but the pronunciation of 'haben' changes significantly (e.g., 'Händ Sie...').
The 'Feuer' Rule
If you ask 'Haben Sie Feuer?', you are asking for a light (for a cigarette/candle). It's a very common idiom.
Capitalization
In writing, always capitalize 'Sie' when it means 'you'. If you write 'haben sie', it means 'do they have'.
意味
Asking if someone possesses something.
The 'Feuer' Rule
If you ask 'Haben Sie Feuer?', you are asking for a light (for a cigarette/candle). It's a very common idiom.
Capitalization
In writing, always capitalize 'Sie' when it means 'you'. If you write 'haben sie', it means 'do they have'.
Add 'vielleicht'
Adding 'vielleicht' (perhaps) makes the question sound even more polite: 'Haben Sie vielleicht...?'
自分をテスト
Choose the correct formal question to ask for a bag.
___ ___ {eine|f} {Tüte|f}?
'Haben Sie' is the correct formal pairing.
Complete the sentence with the correct masculine article (Accusative).
Haben Sie ___ {Katalog|m}?
'Haben' takes the Accusative case, so 'der' becomes 'den'.
Match the German phrase to its English context.
1. Haben Sie Zeit? 2. Haben Sie {ein|n} {Zimmer|n}? 3. Haben Sie {den|m} {Schlüssel|m}?
Matching basic vocabulary with the phrase.
Complete the formal dialogue.
Kunde: Entschuldigung, ___ ___ {einen|m} {Stadtplan|m}? Verkäufer: Ja, natürlich. Hier bitte.
A customer (Kunde) should always use formal address with a seller.
🎉 スコア: /4
ビジュアル学習ツール
Formal vs Informal Possession
練習問題バンク
4 問題___ ___ {eine|f} {Tüte|f}?
'Haben Sie' is the correct formal pairing.
Haben Sie ___ {Katalog|m}?
'Haben' takes the Accusative case, so 'der' becomes 'den'.
左の各項目を右のペアと一致させてください:
Matching basic vocabulary with the phrase.
Kunde: Entschuldigung, ___ ___ {einen|m} {Stadtplan|m}? Verkäufer: Ja, natürlich. Hier bitte.
A customer (Kunde) should always use formal address with a seller.
🎉 スコア: /4
よくある質問
4 問Yes, in Germany, students usually address teachers and professors with 'Sie' unless told otherwise.
'Haben Sie' asks if the person has it. 'Gibt es' asks if it exists in that location generally.
Usually yes, unless it's an uncountable noun like 'Zeit' (time) or 'Geld' (money).
It's not strictly rude, but starting with 'Entschuldigung' (Excuse me) is much more natural and polite.
関連フレーズ
Hätten Sie...?
similarWould you have...?
Gibt es...?
similarIs there / Are there...?
Besitzen Sie...?
specialized formDo you own...?