Post by account_disabled on Dec 26, 2023 4:58:39 GMT
Another mistake that is often made is not guessing when the verb to have has the letter acca (H) in front. Letter that does not serve to make those verbal forms aspirated. The letter acca is a legacy of the origins of the Italian language, which derives from Latin. The verb to have in Latin is habere . So let's see when the verb to have must have the acca. The letter H in the verb “to have” Ho : first person singular, present tense. He wants it . It could be confused with the conjunction or . In Latin it was habeo . Hai : second person singular, present tense. He wants it . It could be confused with the plural preposition ai . But there is also the word aio , created in 1538, which means tutor.
In Latin it was habes . Ha : third person singular, present tense. He wants it . It could be confused with the preposition a . In Latin it was habet . They have : third person plural, present tense. He wants it . It may beSpecial Data confused with the noun anno . In Latin it was habent . One less stroke can change the meaning of a sentence. “I have everything or nothing” is different from “All or nothing” and “I have everything and I have nothing”. “You have cats” is different from “To cats”. “You're right” is different from “You're right”. “What did they do wrong?” is different from “Wrong year?” There are only four verb forms of the verb to have that have acca in front. The man was aware of it. It was for that reason that he had gone to the cemetery, to dig up the woman who had died of syphilis that morning.
Several hours later everything was ready and the man stood aside with his head bowed, reluctantly accepting the law of his time. The woman, crying, had entered the house to prepare to give her youth to her lord. The woman's father had asked the feudal lord to accept her daughter's wishes and take her in the dark, such was the young woman's shyness. And he had accepted her request, already enjoying that fresh and immaculate body. When she entered the bedroom, completely shrouded in darkness, she smelled the scent of freshly picked flowers and other fragrances that she couldn't recognize. She glimpsed the woman's form, motionless under her sheets.
In Latin it was habes . Ha : third person singular, present tense. He wants it . It could be confused with the preposition a . In Latin it was habet . They have : third person plural, present tense. He wants it . It may beSpecial Data confused with the noun anno . In Latin it was habent . One less stroke can change the meaning of a sentence. “I have everything or nothing” is different from “All or nothing” and “I have everything and I have nothing”. “You have cats” is different from “To cats”. “You're right” is different from “You're right”. “What did they do wrong?” is different from “Wrong year?” There are only four verb forms of the verb to have that have acca in front. The man was aware of it. It was for that reason that he had gone to the cemetery, to dig up the woman who had died of syphilis that morning.
Several hours later everything was ready and the man stood aside with his head bowed, reluctantly accepting the law of his time. The woman, crying, had entered the house to prepare to give her youth to her lord. The woman's father had asked the feudal lord to accept her daughter's wishes and take her in the dark, such was the young woman's shyness. And he had accepted her request, already enjoying that fresh and immaculate body. When she entered the bedroom, completely shrouded in darkness, she smelled the scent of freshly picked flowers and other fragrances that she couldn't recognize. She glimpsed the woman's form, motionless under her sheets.