has
( international standards ) ISO 639-3 language code forHaisla . FromMiddle English has ,haes ,hafs ,haves , equivalent tohave +-s . Comparehath .
has
third-person singular simplepresent indicative ofhave The French Revolutionhas influenced popular movements since the 1800s.
1992 , Rudolf M[ athias] Schuster,The Hepaticae and Anthocerotae of North America: East of the Hundredth Meridian , volume V, Chicago, Ill.:Field Museum of Natural History ,→ISBN , page 6:The latterhas the sporophyte seta 4 cells in diam. andhas thecalLejeunea -type androecial branches[ …]
ash ,sha ,SAH ,AHS ,šâh ,Ahs ,šāh ,SHA ,Ash ,Hsa. ,sah ,ahs (Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium .)
has (aorist hasa ,participle hasur )
( transitive ) to (accidentally )meet ,encounter ,face ,come across has vuajtje ―I experience hardship ( intransitive , figurative ) towalk /run into ; tofall in with Standard Albanian conjugation ofhas (active voice)
[1] active verbhas • Fjalor Shqip (Albanian Dictionary)[2] mediopassive verbhásem • Fjalor Shqip (Albanian Dictionary)
has (comparative hasago ,superlative hasen ,excessive hasegi )
bare has
Short form ofhasi ( “ to start ” ) . has
second-person singular present indicative ofhaver FromMiddle High German hase , fromOld High German haso , fromProto-West Germanic *hasō , fromProto-Germanic *hasô ( “ hare ” ) . Cognate withGerman Hase ,English hare .
has m
( Luserna ) hare has f (singulative hasen )
seeds has
second-person singular imperative ofhasit has
second-person singular present active indicative ofhavoir has
second-person singular present indicative ofhaber Of unknown origin.[ 1]
has (plural hasak )
belly ,abdomen ,stomach ( in a broad sense, including the intestines ) Antonym: hát ( “ back ” ) has in Géza Bárczi ,László Országh ,et al. , editors,A magyar nyelv értelmező szótára [The Explanatory Dictionary of the Hungarian Language ] (ÉrtSz.), Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó , 1959–1962.Fifth ed., 1992:→ISBN . FromDutch haas ( “ tenderloin ” ) , fromMiddle Dutch haessen , fromOld Dutch *hāsenewa ,*hāhsenewa , fromProto-Germanic *hanhsenwō ,*hanhasenwō ( “ heel tendon, Achilles tendon ” ) , fromProto-Germanic *hanhaz ( “ heel ” ) +*senwō ( “ sinew ” ) .Doublet ofas .
has (plural has -has )
tenderloin has m sg
h-prothesized form ofas FromProto-Mayan *ha7as .
has
mamey sapote (Pouteria sapota )Church, Clarence; Church, Katherine (1955 ),Vocabulario castellano-jacalteco, jacalteco-castellano [3] (in Spanish), Guatemala C. A.:Instituto Lingüístico de Verano , page20 hās
accusative feminine plural ofhic has
second-person singular preterite indicative ofhunn has
( West Riding ) alternative form ofasse has
alternative form ofheste ( “ directive ” ) FromProto-Germanic *haisaz , whence alsoOld High German heis ,Old Norse háss .
hās
hoarse Declension ofhās — Strong
Middle English:hos ,hose ,hoos ,hoose ,hoce ,hase ,haase ,hayse ,hors ,horse ,hoorse FromNew Latin hassium .
IPA (key ) : /ˈxas/ Rhymes:-as Syllabification:has has m inan
hassium has in Polish dictionaries at PWNhas
inflection ofhaber : second-person singular present indicative second-person singular voseopresent indicative FromDutch haas .
has c
hindleg , back leg of an animalrör påhasorna! get moving! hon är mig ihasorna she's catching up on me has
passive infinitive ofha present passive ofha Inherited fromOttoman Turkish خاص ( has ) fromArabic خَاصّ ( ḵāṣṣ ) .
IPA (key ) : /has/ Hyphenation:has has
inherent inparticular peculiar topure ( chemistry ) characteristic