'Voir' and 'savoir' both come from Latin but are not related.
'Voir' comes from the Latin verb 'videre', via old french 'vedeir', then 'veoir', then 'voir'.
Savoir comes from the popular Latin 'sapere, via the old French: 'sabir' (Strasbourg's Oath, 842), then 'saveir', then 'savoir'.
to know je sais tu sais i know you know
"Savais" is the past tense of the French verb "savoir," which means "to know." It can also mean "knew" or "was aware of" depending on the context in which it is used.
To conjugate "know" in French, you would use the verb "savoir." The conjugation for "savoir" in the present tense is as follows: je sais (I know), tu sais (you know), il/elle/on sait (he/she/one knows), nous savons (we know), vous savez (you know), ils/elles savent (they know).
The word "etymology" comes from the Greek words "etymon," meaning "true sense," and "logia," meaning "study of." It refers to the study of the origins and historical development of words.
No, but "attendre" is a verb meaning "to wait"
to know is translated "savoir" in French.
Savoir (verb) means "to know". "Le savoir" (masculine noun) means the knowledge.
to know is translated 'savoir' in French. Another verb translated as "to know" is connaître.
to know je sais tu sais i know you know
Middle English: from Old French, from Latin patientia, from patient- 'suffering,' from the verb pati .
"I just want to know" is an English equivalent of the French phrase "Je veux juste savoir."Specifically, the subject pronoun "je" means "I." The verb "veux" means "(I) am wishing/wanting, do wish/want, wish/want." The adverb "juste" means "just." The infinitive "savoir" means "to know."The pronunciation is "zhuh vuh jyooste sah-vwahr."
"Savais" is the past tense of the French verb "savoir," which means "to know." It can also mean "knew" or "was aware of" depending on the context in which it is used.
Savant is a derivative from the verb 'savoir' (to know). Savant means 'knowledgeable', 'knowing a great deal', and is also a translation for 'scientist'.
'saviez' is a form of the verb 'savoir', meaning to know in French ; it is the second person plural at the past tense 'imparfait'. vous saviez: you knew (you plural or formal)
To conjugate "know" in French, you would use the verb "savoir." The conjugation for "savoir" in the present tense is as follows: je sais (I know), tu sais (you know), il/elle/on sait (he/she/one knows), nous savons (we know), vous savez (you know), ils/elles savent (they know).
To know [by acquaintance] is an English equivalent of 'connaître'. The French verb is in the infinitive form. It's pronounced 'koh-neh-truh'.To know [by learning, from facts] is an English equivalent of 'savoir'. It also is in the infinitive form. It's pronounced 'sah-vwahr'.
The word "etymology" comes from the Greek words "etymon," meaning "true sense," and "logia," meaning "study of." It refers to the study of the origins and historical development of words.