Some words with the Latin root word "habere" include habit, inhabit, exhibit, and prohibit. The root "habere" means "to have" or "to hold."
habeo, habere = to have
Habere - to have.
Habere - to have
'Habere'---to have.
'Habere'---to have.
habere
Habere integritatem.
"He seems to be not a slave, but a merchant."
The motto of Wells College is 'Habere et dispertire'.
". . . that they indeed, having been crushed by so many misfortunes, have [or had] no hope except in peace."Note that illios should be illos. This is what's known as an "accusative plus infinitive" construction, used in Latin where a "that" clause would occur in English after verbs of knowing, saying, etc. Since the present infinitive is used, the time reference of this clause is the same as that of the main verb (not given here): "have" if the main verb is present, "had" if it is past.
There is no such word in Latin. The verb habere means to have, to hold, to possess, to contain, to handle, to use.