"avoir un grand mercredi" means "to have a big/huge/lengthy" Wednesday in English.
The word 'je' is a personal pronoun. Its equivalent in English is I. The word 'avoir' is the infinitive form of the verb. Its equivalent in English is to have. The phrase 'j'ai' is the French equivalent of the English 'I have'.
That is a phrase in French written by someone who doesn't know French very well, but it is intended to mean have a great time.
Un grand chien is 'a large dog' in English.
The phrase 'avoir honte' means to be ashamed. In the word-by-word translation, the verb 'avoir' means 'to have'. The noun 'honte' means 'shame'.
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.
this question is not in spanish, it must be in the wrong category
Pour être grand, il faut avoir été petit - to be big (ie to grow up) you must have been small (before).
to have a life
mercredi is Wednesday in French.
The French equivalent of the English phrase, to have, is: avoir.
The word 'je' is a personal pronoun. Its equivalent in English is I. The word 'avoir' is the infinitive form of the verb. Its equivalent in English is to have. The phrase 'j'ai' is the French equivalent of the English 'I have'.
j'ai musique et espagnol le mercredi means 'I have music class and Spanish on Wednesdays'.
'je peux avoir vingt euros' means 'I can / I may have twenty euros' in French.
bye and happy vacation? I'm not sure.
It translates from French as "have a little faith"
That is a phrase in French written by someone who doesn't know French very well, but it is intended to mean have a great time.
(avoir) horreur des (araignées) is (to have) a strong dislike for / of (spiders)