Habemus is the conjugated 'we' form of haberewhich means "to have", so habemus means "we have".
Here is the rest of habere conjugated in present tense.
habeo - I have
habes - you have
habet - he/she/it has
habemus - we have
habetis - you all have
habent - they have
Habeo: to hold, habit, general state of.
To hold = tenere
Habit = habitus
General state of = communi statu
Habet is latin for has. Has is singular. Have is plural.
habet = has
habet = Has
Has.
"Habet."
habet
Amor finem non habet, or Finem non habet amor, or Amor non habet finem.
Amor habet nihil legis.
Nemo dat quod non habet
Habeo-I have Habes- you have (sing) Habet- He/She/It has Habemus- We have Habetis- You have (pl.) Habent- They have
Filius nautae habet multam pecuniam.
The wagon does not have horses.
There isn't any Hebrew prayer called "habet"
From the Latin habilis, 'easy to handle', itself derived from habere 'to handle'. And for those who think Nike had an original idea, also the root of the imperative injunction Habet! (just...HANDLE it!!!)
this word first starts out as habeo, which means i have next comes habes, which is you have next is habet, which means he,she,or it has next is habemus, which is we have next is habetis, which is you (all) have and last is habent, which is they have, so habere means to have. this is how you say it, ha- bey- ray.