Etre takes avoir as the helping verb. An easy way to remember is that etre is always the helping verb with verbs of coming or going.
avoir IS French! It means to have. I don't understand what you want to know. Synonyms? posseder = to possess.
"où avoir vous avez été" is how you say "where have you been" in french.
The phrase 'avoir le bonheur' means to have the pleasure. In the word-by-word translation, the verb 'avoir' means 'to have'. The definite article 'le' means 'the'. The noun 'bonheur' means 'delight, fortune, happiness, pleasure'.
Jouer
to have is the verb "avoir" in French.
The French verb "avoir" means "to have." It is used to indicate possession or to form compound tenses in French.
The verb "to have" is avoir.
I you are referring to the french verb 'avoir' it is 'avere' in Italian. It has a very irregular conjugation.
It's the infinitive of the verb "to have". As in the famous quote from the French playwright Molière: "Avoir ou ne pas avoir" (to have or not to have). Nah, just kidding! "Avoir" can a noun very rarely, meaning "possessions" (your "havings") such as your financial worth.
"J'aie" is the first person singular subjunctive form of the verb "avoir" in French. It is used when expressing doubt, desire, or emotion.
bronzer (verb), avoir du bronzage
The dictionary verb is "avoir"...there are a lot of forms of it though.
The verb "avoir" in the future tense in French is "j'aurai," "tu auras," "il/elle/on aura," "nous aurons," "vous aurez," and "ils/elles auront."
Etre takes avoir as the helping verb. An easy way to remember is that etre is always the helping verb with verbs of coming or going.
"Am" in French translates to "ai", a form of the verb "avoir" which means "to have" in English.
The French word for "to have" is "avoir." This is an irregular verb: j'ai, tu as, il a, nous avons, vous avez, ils ont. http://machaut.uchicago.edu/?tense=IndP&verb=avoir&action=search&resource=conjugator