aver
Norman
verb
Definitions
- (Jersey) to have
Etymology
Inherited from Old French aveir inherited from Latin habeō (have, hold, possess, keep, I have, own).
Origin
Latin
habeō
Gloss
have, hold, possess, keep, I have, own
Concept
Semantic Field
Possession
Ontological Category
Action/Process
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- due English
- *aveo Latin
- *habunt Latin
- abhibeo Latin
- adhibeo Latin
- antehabeo Latin
- cohibeo Latin
- debeo Latin
- diribeo Latin
- exhibeo Latin
- habeo Latin
- habeō Latin
- habilis Latin
- habēre Latin
- habēre, habeō, habeo Latin
- inhibeo Latin
- perhibeo Latin
- posthabeo Latin
- praebeo Latin
- praehibeo Latin
- prohibeo Latin
- redhibeo Latin
- *gʰh₁bʰ- Proto-Indo-European
- havour Middle English
- aveir Old French
- avoir Old French
- avea Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- avaer Norman
- r'aver Norman
- aver Old Portuguese
- amu Aromanian
- *habēō Proto-Italic
- aver Old Occitan
- aver Old Spanish
- aer Venetian
- aver Venetian
- avéi Ligurian
- aveur Walloon
- avêr Franco-Provençal
- aveir Gallo
- avèj Piedmontese
- avêr Emilian