The phrase 'avoir honte' means to be ashamed. In the word-by-word translation, the verb 'avoir' means 'to have'. The noun 'honte' means 'shame'.
It's the infinitive of the verb "to have". As in the famous quote from the French playwright Molière: "Avoir ou ne pas avoir" (to have or not to have). Nah, just kidding! "Avoir" can a noun very rarely, meaning "possessions" (your "havings") such as your financial worth.
"avoir un grand mercredi" means "to have a big/huge/lengthy" Wednesday in English.
The question 'Peut y avoir' means Is it allowed[possible, O.K., etc.] to have... . In the word-by-word translation, the verb 'peut' means '[he/she/it] can'. The adverb 'y' means 'there'. And the verb 'avoir' means 'to have'.
I hope to hear from you soon.
The word 'je' is a personal pronoun. Its equivalent in English is I. The word 'avoir' is the infinitive form of the verb. Its equivalent in English is to have. The phrase 'j'ai' is the French equivalent of the English 'I have'.
and have
avoir
to have
to have a horse
to have pleasure
'let me have that ...'
to have a life
It's the infinitive of the verb "to have". As in the famous quote from the French playwright Molière: "Avoir ou ne pas avoir" (to have or not to have). Nah, just kidding! "Avoir" can a noun very rarely, meaning "possessions" (your "havings") such as your financial worth.
"avoir"avoir
"avoir un grand mercredi" means "to have a big/huge/lengthy" Wednesday in English.
that I might have (subjunctive of the verb avoir - to have)
The French equivalent of the English phrase, to have, is: avoir.