Dos formas de posesión: "have" (más universal) y "have got" (más británico).
Tanto have como have got expresan posesión. Have es más universal (americano e internacional) y have got es más británico. Ambos significan "tener".
📊 Comparación de formas
have (US/universal)
have got (UK)
Afirmativo
I have a car.
I've got a car.
Negativo
I don't have a car.
I haven't got a car.
Pregunta
Do you have a car?
Have you got a car?
3ª persona
She has a dog.
She's got a dog.
3ª neg.
She doesn't have a dog.
She hasn't got a dog.
3ª pregunta
Does she have a dog?
Has she got a dog?
🎯 Ejemplos en contexto
I have two brothers. / I've got two brothers.
Tengo dos hermanos.
She has blue eyes. / She's got blue eyes.
Tiene ojos azules.
We don't have any money. / We haven't got any money.
No tenemos dinero.
Do you have a pen? / Have you got a pen?
¿Tienes un bolígrafo?
💡
Regla importante "Have got" solo se usa en presente. Para el pasado, ambos dialectos usan: "I had a car." Para acciones (desayunar, ducharse), solo se usa have: "I have breakfast" ✅ / "I've got breakfast" ❌.
⚡
"She's" puede ser... "She's" = "She is" o "She has". El contexto lo aclara: "She's got a cat" (has) vs "She's happy" (is).