ils habitent, elles habitent (both third person plural, present tense) means 'they live (in)'
"habiter" means "to live, to dwell"
"où habitent / où vivent tes beaux-parents ?"
present: j' habite tu habites il habite nous habitons vous habitez ils habitent all the other forms in the related link.
he lives, she lives: il vit, elle vit.
"OΓΉ habitent tes grands-parents?"
Does it mean they live near here?
"They live" in French is said as "ils vivent" for a group of males, "elles vivent" for a group of females, or "ils/elles vivent" for a mixed group.
ils habitent sur la plage
How many people currently live on Earth is an English equivalent of 'Combien de personnes habitent actuellement sur terre'. The adverb 'combien' means 'how many, how much'. The preposition 'de' means 'of'. The feminine noun 'personnes' means 'people, persons'. The verb 'habitent' means '[they] are living, do live, live'. The adverb 'actuellement' means 'at the moment, currently'. The preposition 'sur' means 'on'. The feminine noun 'terre' means 'land, earth'. All together, they're pronounced 'kohm-byah duh pehr-sohn-zah-beet syoor tehr'.
In French, the word "Inuit" remains singular because it is considered a collective noun that encompasses the entire Inuit people. It is similar to the words "sheep" or "deer" in English, which are the same in both singular and plural form.
It does not mean anything in French.
"Prada" does not mean anything in French.
dormi mean 'slept' in French.