have
51have up — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms have up : present tense I/you/we/they have up he/she/it has up present participle having up past tense had up past participle had up British informal have someone up [often passive] to send someone to a court… …
52have — See: CAT HAS NINE LIVES, ONE S CAKE AND HAVE IT TOO, EVERY CLOUD HAS A SILVER LINING, EVERY DOG HAS HIS DAY, HAVE NOTHING ON or HAVE ANYTHING ON, LITTLE PITCHERS HAVE BIG EARS, or an important word after this in the sentence …
53have to — or[have got to] {v.}, {informal} To be obliged or forced to; need to; must. * /Do you have to go now?/ * /He had to come. His parents made him./ * /I have got to go to the doctor./ * /I have to go to Church./ …
54have — See: CAT HAS NINE LIVES, ONE S CAKE AND HAVE IT TOO, EVERY CLOUD HAS A SILVER LINING, EVERY DOG HAS HIS DAY, HAVE NOTHING ON or HAVE ANYTHING ON, LITTLE PITCHERS HAVE BIG EARS, or an important word after this in the sentence …
55have to — or[have got to] {v.}, {informal} To be obliged or forced to; need to; must. * /Do you have to go now?/ * /He had to come. His parents made him./ * /I have got to go to the doctor./ * /I have to go to Church./ …
56have — [OE] Have and its Germanic cousins, German haben, Dutch hebben, Swedish ha, and Danish have, come from a prehistoric Germanic ancestor *khabēn. This was probably a product of Indo European *kap , which was also the source of English heave and… …
57have — See: cat has nine lives, eat one s cake and have it too, every cloud has a silver lining, every dog has his day, have nothing on or not have anything on, little pitchers have big ears, or an important word after this in the sentence …
58have — verb 1) he had a new car Syn: own, be in possession of, be blessed with, boast, enjoy 2) the flat has five rooms Syn: comprise, consist of, contain, include, incorporate, be compose …
59HÂVE — adj. des deux genres Qui est pâle et défait. Avoir le visage hâve. Il était horriblement hâve. Teint hâve …
60Have — Recorded as Have, Hoave, Hove, Hoves and Hovenden, this is an English medieval surname. It is locational either from the famous Sussex coastal town of Hove near Brighton, or from Hove Edge, a diminished village near Brighouse, in West Yorkshire,… …