"Haben" is the Hispanic equivalent of the meaning to beautiful and funny
haben = to have
Basically, in English the infinitive of "has" is "to have." In German, "to have" means "haben."More technically...English: Has:I have a book.You have a book.He/she/it has a book.They have a book.We have a book.German: Has:I habe a book.You(informal) hast a book.You(formal) haben a book.You(plural) habt a book.He/she/it hat a book.They haben a book.We haben a book.
to read = lesen read (past tense) = las, conjugation of haben + gelesen
"Eins" is a basic German word, meaning "one" in English.
But isn't a German word.
parish. do you mean German word? if that's what you meant, then no. it's English. parish. do you mean German word? if that's what you meant, then no. it's English. parish. do you mean German word? if that's what you meant, then no. it's English.
Genießen sich erfreuen an Freude haben an
The German word "besuchen" translates to "visit" in English.
The German word "nun" translates to "now" in English.
Oxded is not a German word
That word is not German, sorry.
haben Sie das Notebook bemerkt, dass Sie in Südafrika links is the translation in German. It is translated from English to German. German is mostly spoken in the European countries.
The German word herr is equivalent to the English word Mister.