That would be "ha." The following would probably also be helpful:
I have: io ho.
You have: tu hai.
S/he has: lui/lei ha.
We have; noi abbiamo.
You (plural) have: voi avete.
They have: loro hanno.
There is also a convention where you use lei as a polite form of the English "you." It is pronounced the same way, but spelled Lei. In conversation, it's understood that people are using this when they meet you for the first time and are calling you Lei. Voi is the plural, and tu is usually reserved for people you know very well--close friends and family. Also, since verb endings denote who is speaking (doing, etc.) in Italian, quite often subjects are left out, particularly in conversation. Hopes this helps.
Italiano
Andy Italiano's birth name is Andrew Italiano.
Canta in Italiano was created in 1969.
Viaggio Italiano was created in 1996.
Credito Italiano was created in 1870.
Derby Italiano was created in 1884.
Sportivo Italiano was created in 1957.
Quartetto Italiano was created in 1945.
Quartetto Italiano ended in 1980.
Liceo Italiano was created in 1888.
Credito Italiano ended in 1998.
Vincenzo Italiano was born on 1977-12-10.