un habitant, une habitante
The nominal form of the French verb "habiter" is "habitation."
Départ is the nominal form of the French verb partir. The present infinitive means "to depart" in English so its noun form -- in the masculine singular -- is the French equivalent of "departure." The pronunciation will be "dey-par" for the noun and "par-teer" for the verb.
J'ai toujours habité (verb: habiter), j'ai toujours vécu (verb: vivre)
The French verb "avoir" means "to have." It is used to indicate possession or to form compound tenses in French.
"Voyez" is a form of the French verb "voir" in the second person plural, present tense. It means "you see" or "you are seeing."
"Am" in French translates to "ai", a form of the verb "avoir" which means "to have" in English.
In French, Habiter is to live (used when you are talking about where someone lives. Vivre is to live as opposed to being dead.
épargner means 'to save'
Départ is the nominal form of the French verb partir. The present infinitive means "to depart" in English so its noun form -- in the masculine singular -- is the French equivalent of "departure." The pronunciation will be "dey-par" for the noun and "par-teer" for the verb.
Habiter means to live (in), to dwell in English.
J'ai toujours habité (verb: habiter), j'ai toujours vécu (verb: vivre)
the verb for "to live" in french is vivre. however, this verb, when translated back to english, means to be alive essentially, so if that was what you were asking for, vivre is the right verb. if you are looking for "to live" in terms of say, i live in that house over there, the verb you are looking for is habiter.
The verb form 'est' is a French equivalent of '[he/she/it] is'.
Yes, it is a noun. It is a difference between nominal values, the noun form of the verb to vary.
Verb? If you mean noun... "you" in singular form is TU. in plural form it is VOUS.
The nominal form is the infinitive used as a noun, so it is always the same as the infinitive. In that case, "voir" (to see). Example: "Voir rouge est un défaut" (literally "to see red", meaning "to be angry", "is a fault") "Voir" here is used as a noun (nominal) and is the subject of the verb "est" (is). It is not a common verb to use in nominal form.
"I dwell" or "(that) I may inhabit" in the first person singular, "He lives" or "(that) he may occupy" in the third person singular, and "Reside!" in the second person singular are English equivalents of the French word habite. Context makes clear which option suits. The pronunciation will be "a-beet" in French.
"To sleep" is an English equivalent of the French word dormir.Specifically, the French word is a verb. Specifically, it is the present infinitive form of the verb. The pronunciation will be "dohr-meer" in French.