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have
verb
-
have
,
having
,
has
,
had
to
own
or
possess
something
•
I
have
two
brothers
and
a
sister
.
I
have
two
brothers
and
a
sister
.
•
They
have
a
big
garden
behind
their
house
.
They
have
a
big
garden
behind
their
house
.
Old
English
habban
,
of
Germanic
origin
,
related
to
German
haben
.
verb
-
have
,
having
,
has
,
had
to
experience
or
be
affected
by
something
such
as
a
feeling
,
state
,
or
illness
•
I
have
a
terrible
headache
this
morning
.
I
have
a
terrible
headache
this
morning
.
•
She
has
a
cold
and
can't
come
today
.
She
has
a
cold
and
can't
come
today
.
verb
-
have
,
having
,
has
,
had
to
eat
or
drink
something
•
Let's
have
lunch
at
the
new
café
.
Let's
have
lunch
at
the
new
café
.
•
She
always
has
oatmeal
for
breakfast
.
She
always
has
oatmeal
for
breakfast
.
verb
-
have
,
having
,
has
,
had
to
arrange
,
hold
,
or
take
part
in
an
activity
or
event
•
We
will
have
a
meeting
at
3
p
.
m
.
We
will
have
a
meeting
at
3
p
.
m
.
•
The
city
had
a
big
parade
last
weekend
.
The
city
had
a
big
parade
last
weekend
.
verb
-
have
,
having
,
has
,
had
to
cause
or
persuade
someone
to
do
something
•
The
teacher
had
the
students
rewrite
their
essays
.
The
teacher
had
the
students
rewrite
their
essays
.
•
I'll
have
the
mechanic
check
the
brakes
.
I'll
have
the
mechanic
check
the
brakes
.
behave
verb
-
behave
,
behaving
,
behaves
,
behaved
to
act
in
a
polite
or
socially
acceptable
way
•
“
Please
behave
while
we
are
at
the
museum
,”
the
teacher
whispered
to
her
class
.
“
Please
behave
while
we
are
at
the
museum
,”
the
teacher
whispered
to
her
class
.
•
The
puppy
will
behave
if
you
give
it
a
treat
.
The
puppy
will
behave
if
you
give
it
a
treat
.
From
Middle
English
behaven
,
from
be-
+
have
in
the
sense
of
‘
to
hold
oneself
’.
verb
-
behave
,
behaving
,
behaves
,
behaved
of
a
thing
or
substance
:
to
act
or
operate
in
a
particular
way
•
My
old
laptop
starts
to
behave
strangely
when
it
overheats
.
My
old
laptop
starts
to
behave
strangely
when
it
overheats
.
•
Scientists
study
how
liquids
behave
at
very
low
temperatures
.
Scientists
study
how
liquids
behave
at
very
low
temperatures
.
Same
origin
as
primary
sense
:
be-
+
have
,
extended
to
describe
the
manner
in
which
objects
or
systems
act
.
hadn't
verb
-
have
,
having
,
has
,
had
contracted
form
of
'had
not'
;
used
as
the
negative
form
of
the
past
tense
and
past
participle
of
'have'
to
form
the
past
perfect
tense
.
•
By
noon
,
she
hadn't
finished
her
project
.
By
noon
,
she
hadn't
finished
her
project
.
•
They
hadn't
seen
snow
before
moving
north
.
They
hadn't
seen
snow
before
moving
north
.
Contraction
of
'had'
+
'not
,
'
where
'had'
derives
from
Old
English
'hæfde
,
'
past
tense
of
'habban'
(
to
have
or
hold
).
Such
negative
contractions
emerged
in
Middle
English
speech
and
writing
.
hasn't
verb
-
have
,
having
,
has
,
had
,
N/A
a
contraction
of
"
has
not
",
used
with
he
,
she
,
it
,
or
a
singular
noun
to
form
the
negative
present
perfect
tense
or
to
indicate
lack
of
possession
.
•
She
hasn't
finished
her
homework
yet
.
She
hasn't
finished
her
homework
yet
.
•
The
baby
hasn't
slept
all
night
.
The
baby
hasn't
slept
all
night
.
Contraction
of
"
has
not
",
with
"
has
"
being
the
third-person
singular
of
"
have
"
from
Old
English
"
habban
",
entering
common
written
use
in
the
17th
century
.
misbehave
verb
-
misbehave
,
misbehaving
,
misbehaves
,
misbehaved
to
act
badly
or
break
the
rules
,
especially
by
not
obeying
parents
or
teachers
•
Don't
misbehave
in
class
,
or
you'll
get
detention
.
Don't
misbehave
in
class
,
or
you'll
get
detention
.
•
The
toddler
misbehaves
every
time
we
leave
the
room
.
The
toddler
misbehaves
every
time
we
leave
the
room
.
From
mid-15th
century
English
,
combining
the
prefix
mis-
(
meaning
'badly'
or
'wrongly'
)
with
behave
(
to
act
in
a
certain
way
).