avoir IS French! It means to have. I don't understand what you want to know. Synonyms? posseder = to possess.
Etre takes avoir as the helping verb. An easy way to remember is that etre is always the helping verb with verbs of coming or going.
like the verb "être" (to be), the verb "avoir" (to have) is not only a verb by itself but also an auxiliary verb. you can use it also with everyday situations: avoir faim, avoir soif, avoir sommeil = to be hungry, to be thirsty, to be sleepy avoir froid, avoir chaud = to be cold, to be hot
"où avoir vous avez été" is how you say "where have you been" in french.
verbs have no gender in French. Only nouns and adjectives can be masculine or feminine.
The phrase 'avoir le bonheur' means to have the pleasure. In the word-by-word translation, the verb 'avoir' means 'to have'. The definite article 'le' means 'the'. The noun 'bonheur' means 'delight, fortune, happiness, pleasure'.
the verbs that take "avoir" are the verbs that do need a complement. It means all the transitive verbs need the auxiliaury "avoir".
is there about 8? maybe?
spell it 'avoir' - one of the most used verbs in French.
"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
Etre takes avoir as the helping verb. An easy way to remember is that etre is always the helping verb with verbs of coming or going.
He helps you learn the french verbs in the past tense that use Etre instead of Avoir
"avoir"avoir
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.
être, avoir - (to be, to have)faire, aller, prendre (to do, to go, to take)aimer, finir, vouloir (to love /like, to finish, to want)
avoir
'Être' verbs are a group of French verbs that are conjugated similarly to the verb "être" (to be). These verbs include verbs like "aller" (to go), "venir" (to come), and "naître" (to be born), among others. They often have irregular conjugations that do not follow typical verb patterns in French.
To have = Avoir