
Rod Berger, Forbes, 28 June 2022 These forming mega-conferences could break apart as quickly as they were assembled if a streaming giant promises a better price and more visibility for erstwhile haves turned have-nots. 2022 The financial sector has notoriously been branded as the great differentiator between the haves and the have-nots. Matt Young, Chron, 22 July 2022 They’ve actually been engaged for a few months but have only told their inner-inner circle-basically immediate family, and trusted, very old friends.Īlyssa Bailey, ELLE, 16 July 2022 Recent Examples on the Web: Noun The new practice of paying student athletes has already begun to separate the haves from the have-nots in college sports. Zach Osterman, The Indianapolis Star, 25 July 2022 The Yankees have been playing baseball a really long time, but they just got treated as rudely as they’ve ever been treated in the franchise’s 100-plus year history. Los Angeles Times, 25 July 2022 The ones who’ve been around a while, and particularly the ones who have walked roughly the same path Banks - a rangy, versatile frontcourt player - now does. 2022 Other California cities have had far higher rates of success housing people who’ve been issued the vouchers. officials have recently stated.Įrin Prater, Fortune, 4 Aug. 2022 Up to one in five American adults who’ve had COVID-19 are living with long COVID, U.S.

HAVEN MEANING PRO
2022 Three-down backs don't reach Super Bowl Going back 15 years, there have been 37 rushers who’ve touched the ball 350 times or more in a single season, according to an analysis of statistics from Pro Football Reference. 2022 Energy-efficiency advocates and trade groups alike say the incentives could nudge consumers who’ve had plenty of reasons to put off buying new appliances if their existing ones haven’t stopped working. Phrase have (noun), will (verb) is from 1954, originally from comedian Bob Hope, in the form Have tux, will travel Hope described this as typical of vaudevillians' ads in Variety, indicating a willingness and readiness to perform anywhere.Recent Examples on the Web: Verb Also, in the Mobile area, we’ve been blessed to have a game each week televised on Friday night.īen Thomas | al, 19 Aug. Phrase have a nice day as a salutation after a commercial transaction attested by 1970, American English. To have to for "must" (1570s) is from sense of "possess as a duty or thing to be done" (Old English). Used as an auxiliary in Old English, too (especially to form present perfect tense) the word has taken on more functions over time Modern English he had better would have been Old English him (dative) wære betere. Sense of "possess, have at one's disposal" ( I have a book) is a shift from older languages, where the thing possessed was made the subject and the possessor took the dative case (as in Latin est mihi liber "I have a book," literally "there is to me a book").

Old English habban "to own, possess be subject to, experience," from Proto-Germanic *habejanan (source also of Old Norse hafa, Old Saxon hebbjan, Old Frisian habba, German haben, Gothic haban "to have"), from PIE root *kap- "to grasp." Not related to Latin habere, despite similarity in form and sense the Latin cognate is capere "seize. It is the hypothetical source of/evidence for its existence is provided by: Sanskrit kapati "two handfuls " Greek kaptein "to swallow, gulp down," kope "oar, handle " Latin capax "able to hold much, broad," capistrum "halter," capere "to grasp, lay hold be large enough for comprehend " Lettish kampiu "seize " Old Irish cacht "servant-girl," literally "captive " Welsh caeth "captive, slave " Gothic haban "have, hold " Old English hæft "handle," habban "to have, hold." It forms all or part of: accept anticipate anticipation behave behoof behoove cable cacciatore caitiff capable capacious capacity capias capiche capstan caption captious captivate captive captor capture case (n.2) "receptacle " catch catchpoll cater chase (n.1) "a hunt " chase (v.) "to run after, hunt " chasse chasseur conceive cop (v.) "to seize, catch " copper (n.2) "policeman " deceive emancipate except forceps gaffe haft have hawk (n.) heave heavy heft incapacity inception incipient intercept intussusception manciple municipal occupy participation perceive precept prince purchase receive recipe recover recuperate sashay susceptible.

Proto-Indo-European root meaning "to grasp."
