If used like a verb it means to put but it also can mean to get high, all depend of the context
"ponerse" is also used as slang for foot the bill, you pay, in several countries.
Ponce is not an actual Spanish word, per se, it is a Spanish surname that is derived from the French noble surname Poncelet. If you meant to write "ponte" it is the tú command of "ponerse", meaning literally "put yourself". However, ponerse usually translates into an expression in English. For example: "ponerse nervioso" means "to get nervous" or "ponerse a decir" means "to begin to say".
to "Put on airs"; self-agrandise; To think yourself important or special.
Ponerse verde (s) verdear
Ponerse is a Spanish word that means "to put itself" in English. One Spanish word can translate into several words in English.
As in "put on a costume", it would be "disfrazarse". To dress well is "ponerse elegante."
to put on (an article of clothing) -> mettre We are putting on our shoes. -> Nous mettons nos chaussures.
"Ponte" in Spanish can mean "bridge" when referring to a physical structure. It can also be used as a command form of the reflexive verb "ponerse," meaning "put on" or "get dressed."
Al ponerse el sol - 1967 is rated/received certificates of: Spain:T
ponerse
ponerse el cinturon
It means "But you can put yourself in hell." Or more loosely, "You can go to hell".
Get dressed in Spanish is, ponerse la ropa.Ponerse la ropa conjugated is:I get dressed = me pongoYou get dressed = teponesHe gets dressed = se poneWe get dressed = nos ponemosYou all get dressed = OS poniesThey get dressed = se ponen