The verb 'peut' means [he/she/it] can. As with English speakers, French speakers tend to have subjects with their verbs. In this example, the verb is in the third person singular of the present indicative tense. So the appropriate pronoun is 'he, she, or it'.
'we can'
It means Maybe.
[He/she/it] can be is an English equivalent of 'peut être'. The verb 'peut' means '[he/she/it] can or is able'. The infinitive 'être' means 'to be'. Together, they're pronounced 'puh-tehtr'.peut-être means perhaps or maybe
"yes can also smile for you"
Peut-être means perhaps or could-be.
'we can'
"Comment peut-on mesurer ... ?" means "How can we measure ...." in English.
perhaps
"peut-être tu m'aimes" means "maybe you love me".
There is no such word. Do you mean a peut... to have fear?
The verb 'peut' is in the third person singular. It's in the present indicative tense. And its meaning is [he/she/it] can.
It means Maybe.
The question 'Peut y avoir' means Is it allowed[possible, O.K., etc.] to have... . In the word-by-word translation, the verb 'peut' means '[he/she/it] can'. The adverb 'y' means 'there'. And the verb 'avoir' means 'to have'.
Perhaps it was me
Pe is the short for "Peut-être" which mean "Maybe"
According to Google Translate, "peut voir le truck aujourdhui" means "can see the truck today".
But, who can stop (+ someone/something) ?