I think it means have?
"hast" is old English for the verb "to have". So "hast not" means "does not have".
"Hast" in the poem "Jabberwocky" means to have or possess something. It is an old English word that is used to indicate possession or ownership, similar to "has."
apostrophe
Du hast keine Ahnung = You have no idea.
Hast Du Geschwister? means do you have any siblings?
What hast thou done means what have you done.
Depending on context, hast can be:second person present conjugation of the verb haben (to have): du hast - you haveoras a noun (capitalised) Hast:hastehastinessrushrashness
Hast du gegessen? (informal) Haben Sie gegessen? (formal)
I assume you mean "du hast mich", this is German, and means "you have me". I don't know how you say you have me in Italian, if that's what you meant.
"Fuchs du hast die Gans gestohlen" "Fox you have stolen the goose"
Awsome digital stuff that works
It's the second person singular form of the verb "to have", which conjugates as follows: I have, thou hast, he/she has, we have, you have, they have. This form was old-fashioned even in Shakespeare's day, being replaced by the plural form "you have", but he seems to have liked it, and used it a lot more than his contemporaries.