hadst
Meaning of hadst
verb
- To possess, own.
I have a house and a car.
- To hold, as something at someone's disposal.
Do you have the key? (not necessarily one's own key)
- Used to state the existence or presence of someone in a specified relationship with the subject.
I have a really mean boss.
- To partake of (a particular substance, especially food or drink, or action or activity).
Can I have a look at that?
- To be scheduled to attend, undertake or participate in.
Fred won't be able to come to the party; he has a meeting that day.
- To experience, go through, undergo.
He had surgery on his hip yesterday.
- To be afflicted with, suffer from.
He had a cold last week.
- (auxiliary verb, taking a past participle) Used in forming the perfect aspect.
I had already eaten.
- Used as an interrogative verb before a pronoun to form a tag question, echoing a previous use of 'have' as an auxiliary verb or, in certain cases, main verb. (For further discussion, see the appendix English tag questions.)
They haven't eaten dinner yet, have they?
- (auxiliary verb, taking a to-infinitive) See have to.
I have to go.
- To give birth to.
My mother had me when she was 25.
- To engage in sexual intercourse with.
He's always bragging about how many women he's had.
- To accept as a romantic partner.
Despite my protestations of love, she would not have me.
- (transitive with bare infinitive) To cause to, by a command, request or invitation.
They had me feed their dog while they were out of town.
- (transitive with adjective or adjective-phrase complement) To cause to be.
He had him arrested for trespassing.
- (transitive with bare infinitive) To be affected by an occurrence. (Used in supplying a topic that is not a verb argument.)
I've had three people today tell me my hair looks nice.
- (transitive with adjective or adjective-phrase complement) To depict as being.
Their stories differed; he said he'd been at work when the incident occurred, but her statement had him at home that entire evening.
- To defeat in a fight; take.
I could have him!
- (obsolete outside Ireland) To be able to speak (a language).
I have no German.
- To feel or be (especially painfully) aware of.
Dan certainly has arms today, probably from scraping paint off four columns the day before.
- To trick, to deceive.
You had me alright! I never would have thought that was just a joke.
- (often with present participle) To allow; to tolerate.
I asked my dad if I could go to the concert this Thursday, but he wouldn't have it since it's a school night.
- (often used in the negative) To believe, buy, be taken in by.
I made up an excuse as to why I was out so late, but my wife wasn't having any of it.
- To host someone; to take in as a guest.
Thank you for having me!
- To get a reading, measurement, or result from an instrument or calculation.
I have two contacts on my scope.
- (of a jury) To consider a court proceeding that has been completed; to begin deliberations on a case.
We'll schedule closing arguments for Thursday, and the jury will have the case by that afternoon.
- To make an observation of (a bird species).
Information about hadst
- It is a verb.
- Languages in which hadst is used:
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Hyphenation of hadst
hadst
- It consists of 1 syllables and 5 chars.
- hadst is a word monosyllabic because it has one syllable
hadst synonyms
Meaning :
Anagrams of hadst
Words that rhyme with hadst
No rhymes for hadst found