To conjugate the French verb 'avoir' means to take it through all of the voices, tenses, persons, and moods. The voices are active or passive. In this case, an active construction is 'you have closed the door'. An example of a passive construction is 'the door has been closed by you'. The tenses are present, future, conditional, imperfect, perfect, and their combinations such as conditional perfect, future perfect, past perfect, simple perfect. The persons are the subject and subject pronouns in the singular and plural. Thus, the singular choices are first ['je/I'], second ['tu/you'], and third ['il/elle/he/she/it']. The plural choices are ['nous/we'], second ['vous/you'], and third ['ils/elles/they']. The moods are imperative [of command], indicative [of reality], infinitive [of 'to...'], and subjunctive [of wishes].
I suggest that you look at the Le Conjugueur website
Present for 'avoir':
j'ai
tu as
il a, elle a, on a
nous avons
vous avez
ils ont, elles ont
The full conjugation is in link.
to have is spelled 'avoir' in French.
avoir un doute, avoir des doutes
"Avoir de la chance" is the form with "avoir" which is equivalent to "être chanceux" (to be lucky).
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.
hear the pronounciation in link :)
"Have big feet" in French translates to "avoir de gros pieds."
You need to conjugate verbs in most languages. Whether you realize it or not, you conjugate verbs in English as well as in French. Use the French verb "avoir" for example. "j'ai" translates to "I have", and "il a" translates to "he has". If you didn't conjugate it and just left it as "j'avoir" then that would translate to "I to have" which is obviously incorrect.
"had" is the past tense of "to have", which is the verb "avoir" in French imparfait tense for avoir: j'avais tu avais il avait nous avions vous aviez ils avaient It is one of the two "auxiliary" verbs in French, it enables you to conjugate verbs in composite tenses like plus que parfait or passé composé. auxiliary verbs: to have: avoir to be: être
It depends on the verb; avoir conjugates as ai, as, a, avons, avez, ont in the present tense while lancerconjugates as lance, lances, lance, lançons, lancez, lancent. You should look up the verb on wiktionary.org for its conjugation.
"avoir"avoir
In French, "must have" can be translated as "doit avoir" or "il faut avoir."
To have = Avoir
to have is the verb "avoir" in French.
to have is spelled 'avoir' in French.
The French verb "avoir" means "to have." It is used to indicate possession or to form compound tenses in French.
avoir
avoir