have

Προτάσεις
An user
" You   have   helped   me ."  The man
👨
  continued   to   prepare   his   tea
🫖
saying   nothing .

"Με βοήθησες." Ο άνθρωπος συνέχισε να προετοιμάζει το τσάι του, λέγοντας τίποτα.

An user
He
👨
  is   thought
💭
  to   have   lived   in   this   manner   for   roughly   three   years .

Θεωρείται ότι έχει ζήσει με αυτόν τον τρόπο για περίπου τρία χρόνια.

An user
I   have   been   waiting   for you   here   at   this   oasis   for   a
🅰️
  long time .

Σας περίμενα εδώ σε αυτό το όαση για μεγάλο χρονικό διάστημα.

An user
Several   books
📚
  and   articles   have   been   written   from   this   perspective .

Αρκετά βιβλία και άρθρα έχουν γραφτεί από αυτή την άποψη.

An user
I   have   no idea   what   complexity   science   is .

Δεν έχω ιδέα τι είναι η επιστήμη της πολυπλοκότητας.

Εννοια (Αγγλικός)

Έννοιες

έχω

κατέχω

λαμβάνω

κάνω

έχει

διαθέτω

επιτυγχάνω

καταφέρνω

αποδέχομαι

αναγκάζομαι

αρρωσταίνω

κρατώ

νοσώ

παθαίνω

γαμώ

’exo

δέχομαι

δίνω

προκαλώ

καταναλώνω

Απέναντι από
have-not
Συχνότητα

A1
Προφέρεται ως (IPA)
/hæv/
Ετυμολογία (Αγγλικός)

In summary

From Middle English haven, from Old English habban (“to have”), from Proto-West Germanic *habbjan, from Proto-Germanic *habjaną (“to have”), durative of *habjaną (“to lift, take up”), from Proto-Indo-European *kh₂pyéti, present tense of *keh₂p- (“to take, seize, catch”). Related to heave. Since there is no common Indo-European root for a transitive possessive verb have (notice that Latin habeō is not etymologically related to English have), Proto-Indo-European probably lacked the have structure. Instead, the third person forms of be were used, with the possessor in dative case, compare Latin mihi est / sunt, literally to me is / are. Cognates Cognate with Scots hae (“to have”), North Frisian haa, heewe (“to have”), Saterland Frisian häbe, hääbe (“to have”), West Frisian hawwe (“to have”), Afrikaans hê (“to have”), Alemannic German haa, heen, hoh, hä, häbä, hè (“to have”), Bavarian hobm, hobn, hoom, håbn (“to have”), Cimbrian haban, hen, håm (“to have”), Dutch, Low German hebben (“to have”), German haben (“to have”), Limburgish haane, höbbe (“to have”), Luxembourgish hunn (“to have”), Mòcheno hom (“to have”), Vilamovian hon (“to have”), Yiddish האָבן (hobn, “to have”), Danish have (“to have”), Elfdalian åvå (“to have”), Faroese hava (“to have”), Icelandic hafa (“to have”), Norwegian Bokmål ha (“to have”), Norwegian Nynorsk ha, hava, have, hå (“to have”), Swedish ha, hafva, hava (“to have”), Gothic 𐌷𐌰𐌱𐌰𐌽 (haban, “to have”), Albanian kap (“to grab, catch, grip”), Latin capiō (“take”, verb), Russian хапать (xapatʹ, “to seize”).

Notes

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