What is the meaning of ?

hectare

ISO 639-1 language code for Hausa.

Alternative form of a (have)

A representation of laughter.

An exclamation of triumph or discovery.

An exclamation of grief.

A sound of hesitation: er, um.

Said when making a vigorous attack.

to eat

to gnaw, consume, wear out

to capture

the Arabic letter ح

to open (mouth)

four

house

yes

and

water

water.

hundred

to winnow

Nonstandard spelling of .

Nonstandard spelling of .

Nonstandard spelling of .

Nonstandard spelling of .

water

Alternative form of he (he)

Alternative form of heo (she)

Alternative form of he (they)

Alternative form of haven (to have)

there (medial)

to have

to suffer

to have, to possess, to own

have; Used in forming the perfect aspect and the past perfect aspect.

to have sex

Alternative form of a

and

to give

expresses laughter

expresses triumph or discovery

if

when

Romanization of 𒄩 (ḫa)

five

which, what (interrogative pronoun)

Han Chinese

father

have

hey

tooth

and

third-person singular present indicative of haver

he, she

and

while

ha! (an exclamation of triumph or discovery)

ha (a representation of laughter), often repeated

Abbreviation of hectare.

ha

ah

alcohol

community

song

Pardon?

isn't it?

ha (expressing laughter)

ha

third-person singular present indicative of havoir

third-person singular present indicative of haber

Expresses laughter.

Expresses triumph or discovery.

Expresses surprise or a sudden sensation.

Expresses hesitation.

if (introducing a conditional clause; often coupled with akkor (then))

when, once

expressing astonishment, fright, or shock

drawing attention to some soft sound

huh?, what?, come again?, I'm sorry?

(personal, plural) they, them, their

expression of excitement or ridicule: ha!

expression of relief: whew!

expression of surprise: huh?

The name of the Latin-script letter H/h.

present tense of haber

third-person singular present indicative of avere

ah! (usually ironic or sarcastic)

The hiragana syllable (ha) or the katakana syllable (ha) in Hepburn romanization.

The name of the letter H.

expressing joy or laughter: hurrah!, ha ha!

ha

The name of the Latin-script letter H/h.

huh?, what?

second-person singular imperative of haen

Alternative form of (hey!)

third-person singular present indicative of avé

Obsolete spelling of .

expresses laughter

expresses triumph or discovery

tag question, huh

third-person singular present indicative of haber

To have; to possess, or to have as a property; to come into possession of something concrete or abstract.

Used together with the supine form of a verb in the construction of perfect or pluperfect forms

ha!

what?, come again?, I'm sorry?, huh?

interrogative particle, used to express inquiry

speculative particle, used to express doubt, disbelief

exclamatory particle, used to express wonder, surprise, excitement

imperative final particle, used to soften requests or commands to have someone do something

the name of the Latin-script letter H/h, in the Abakada alphabet

third-person singular present indicative of avere

yes; yeah

yea, uh-huh; understood, got it

oh yeah

yes? right? hmm?

I told you so, there it is

sorry? eh? huh? (What did you say?)

Letter of the Arabic alphabet: ح

yes

Abbreviation of hecta (hectare).

yes?; no?; m'kay?; amirite?

ha (laughter)

alternative form of any present-tense form of hawwe except for the third-person singular

what a pity; an interjection used to denote displeasure or disappointment

to graze, to scrape (something), to erode, to abrade

to shine brightly

to jam or wedge something into some space

to become jammed, gagged, or barricaded

to allocate, to distribute, to share, to divide things (among a group)

huh? what?

Used at the end of a sentence to express an imperative.

Used at the end of a question used as a retort.

Used after an item when listing.

to intimidate; to threaten; to bully

Source: wiktionary.org