Had

来自Big Physics

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Old English habban, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch hebben and German haben, also probably to heave.


文件:Ety img had.png

wiktionary

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From Middle English hadde(preterite), yhad(past participle), from Old English hæfde(first and third person singular preterite), ġehæfd(past participle), from Proto-Germanic *habd-, past and past participle stem of *habjaną(“to have”), equivalent to have +‎ -ed. Cognate with Dutch had, German hatte, Swedish hade, Icelandic hafði.


etymonline

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had

past tense and past participle of have, from Old English gehæfd. Assimilation of -f- to a following consonant is typical (as also in woman, lord, lady, head (n.), leman). Used since late Old English as an auxiliary to make pluperfect tense-phrases. You never had it so good (1946) was said to be the stock answer to any complaints about U.S. Army life.