It's Haitian Creole. Sak pase - What's up N'ap boule - (most common response to sak pase) I'm ok
Sac Pase. (Literally, "What's going on?")
It's Haitian Creole. Sak pase - What's up N'ap boule - (most common response to sak pase) I'm ok http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090820123719AAAJ2PB
It's Haitian Creole. Sak pase - What's up N'ap boule - (most common response to sak pase) I'm ok http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090820123719AAAJ2PB
"Si pase" is Spanish for "if I pass" or "if I passed," depending on the context.
"Sak" does not have a standard meaning in English, but it could be shorthand for "sake", which is a Japanese alcoholic beverage made from fermented rice.
"Lo pase" in Spanish means "I passed it" or "I went through it." It can refer to passing a test, an experience, or a situation successfully.
"Come on in!" or "Come inside."
"Que pase bien el día" is Spanish for "I wish you a good day" or "have a good day."
Sak is not a french word, but "sac" is. roughly translated it means "Bag of a God" doesn't make much sense to me...
SAK Klagenfurt was created in 1970.
Sak Sutsakhan died in 1994.