To allow; to tolerate.
To be afflicted with, suffer from.
To consider a court proceeding that has been completed; to begin deliberations on a case.
To believe, buy, be taken in by.
To feel or be (especially painfully) aware of.
To obtain.
To include as a part, ingredient, or feature.
See have to.
To defeat in a fight; take.
To accept as a romantic partner.
To undertake or perform (an action or activity).
To be affected by an occurrence. (Used in supplying a topic that is not a verb argument.)
Used to state the existence or presence of someone in a specified relationship with the subject.
To cause to, by a command, request or invitation.
To cause to be.
To be able to speak (a language).
To hold, as something at someone's disposal.
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.)
To trick, to deceive.
To experience, go through, undergo.
To depict as being.
To inflict punishment or retribution on.
To make an observation of (a bird species).
To possess, own.
To engage in sexual intercourse with.
To get a reading, measurement, or result from an instrument or calculation.
To consume or use up (a particular substance or resource, especially food or drink).
Used in forming the perfect aspect.
To host someone; to take in as a guest.
To be scheduled to attend, undertake or participate in.
To give birth to.
One who has some (contextually specified) thing.
A wealthy or privileged person.
A fraud or deception; something misleading.
To restrict; not to allow to go beyond a certain bound, to set boundaries.
To have a limit in a particular set.
Being a fixed limit game.
A restriction; a bound beyond which one may not go.
The cone of a diagram through which any other cone of that same diagram can factor uniquely.
A determining feature; a distinguishing characteristic.
Fixed limit.
The final, utmost, or furthest point; the border or edge.
The first group of riders to depart in a handicap race.
A person who is exasperating, intolerable, astounding, etc.
A value to which a sequence converges. Equivalently, the common value of the upper limit and the lower limit of a sequence: if the upper and lower limits are different, then the sequence has no limit (i.e., does not converge).
Any of several abstractions of this concept of limit.