devoir
besoin "dose" means pre-established amount; you must write "does" for the 3rd person of the auxiliary "to do". Also, "need" could be a verb: "avoir besoin de".
it is the verb to have. Je: means I but you must substitute for the apostrophe and ai to make the verb I have
Vous devez is French for 'you have'. This is the 2nd person plural for the verb "devoir".
all predicates must have a verb but not all verbs need a predicate
The noun "need" is "(le) besoin" in French. The verb "to need" is "avoir besoin de" in French.
To have to. ex) J'ai dû ("u" has a circumflex) means "I had to..."
A complex french sentence has to have to verbs in it. Your first verb must be conjugated and your second verb must be left as an infinitve. Ex: Je vais nettoyer ma chambre. Translation: Im going to clean my room. The verb "Vais" is conjugated in the "Je" form, while "Nettoyer" stays the same.
The verb in French for "to learn" is "Apprendre"
No, but "attendre" is a verb meaning "to wait"
No, "appeler" is a regular -er verb in French. It conjugates according to regular -er verb patterns.
Must be is a verb phrase.
odeur as a noun, or sentir as a verb. the verb must be conjugated, and in the future, if you want to look up an translation, use wordreference. that website also has a french translator.