present:
j' habite
tu habites
il habite
nous habitons
vous habitez
ils habitent
all the other forms in the related link.
habite, habites, habitons, habitez, habitent
The nominal form of the French verb "habiter" is "habitation."
habiter - to live j'habite - I live
It means "I love living on a farm" in French.
yes or no, it depends if you like your city or not
J'ai toujours habité (verb: habiter), j'ai toujours vécu (verb: vivre)
habiter
habiter
nous allons vivre/habiter (vivre=to live life; habiter=to live in a place)
In French, Habiter is to live (used when you are talking about where someone lives. Vivre is to live as opposed to being dead.
habiter le pôle nord
The nominal form of the French verb "habiter" is "habitation."
habiter - to live j'habite - I live
Habiter means to live (in), to dwell in English.
J'ai toujours habité (verb: habiter), j'ai toujours vécu (verb: vivre)
If you mean to live in the context of 'I live in a big house' then the infinitive is habiter. If you mean to live in the context of 'I want to live, not die' then the infinitive is vivre
ils habitent, elles habitent (both third person plural, present tense) means 'they live (in)'
Some of the main French verbs include "Γͺtre" (to be), "avoir" (to have), "faire" (to do/make), "aller" (to go), and "prendre" (to take). These are commonly used and essential verbs in the French language.