"Avez-vous l'appoint ?" means "do you have the (smaller) money". This is a question heard when a seller asks you if you could pay the exact amount, without him having to give you anything back.
Avoir l'appoint: to have the exact sum, not an approximative one.
Faire l'appoint: to give the extra cents or small coins that are needed to get to the exact sum.
Do you have? Avez-vous une voiture? Do you have a car?
"Est-ce que vous avez ..." means "do you have..." in French.
"Ou avez-vous appris le français?" means "Where did you learn French?" in English.
why have you like me (like I have)
Have you thought of me today.
j'avez doesn't work because avez is he present form of avoir ,which means to have., for you... so for I (je) the present form of to have would be ai.... J'ai ...means to have.
un hibou (n 'x' when singular,only when plural) is an owl in French. 'Avez-vous' is a question meaning 'do you have?', so 'avez-vous mon hibou' means 'do you have my owl' in English.
since when do you speak fluent French?
Those two words do not exactly go together.Je (I) goes with ai (have) to make J'ai (I have)Avez is a different conjugation to suit vous (You to a person in authority, or You in plural)So if you heard J'avez in a sentence before, It must have started with Vous j'avez...French is confusing.Sorry for my first answer.
It means "In which street did you spend your childhood?" in French.
you have
Ave. : short for "avenue" /or/ avé : short for Ave Maria, in English: Hail Mary /or/ avez : second person plural, present tense (vous avez) for the verb "avoir", to have.