A man or youth
The man (speaking of a singular person, not "the man" as in police or government)
Tu mano can mean your hand or it can mean your brother where mano is short for hermano. In the last sense, mano in Spanish would be the equivalent of bro' (slang for brother) in English.
It means hand.
peanut
Dabar tu - mano pasaulis; Dabar tu esi mano pasaulis. [da'bar 'tu e'si 'mano pa'saulis]
Sostén tu mano
Una mano is Spanish for 'a hand'
Literally, be patient; the fruit will fall into your hand. Figuratively, I've heard it to mean: With patience, the fruit of your labors will soon be yours to enjoy.
"mano" in Italian means "hand."
"Su mano derecho" means "his/her/your right hand."
Contrary to popular misconception, "mano a mano" does not mean 'man to man.' It is a Spanish phrase literally translated as 'hand-to-hand,' usually used in the context of combat or competition. In English, many people incorrectly use the expression "[to] talk mano a mano" to mean "[to] talk one-on-one." But it really means something more like "[to] go head-to-head."
Antanas Jonynas has written: 'Puodai savo vietose' 'Tu--mano kraujas gyvas'
a hand
My hand
bajo mano = underhand bajo la mano = under (the) hand *Please, read carefully because it is "BAJA" (a verb), not "bajo" (a preposition).
If you mean 'mano' that's 'hand'.