Please
Bevakasha ֻ(בבקשה) literally means "in a request". It is used for "please" and "you're welcome".
I assume you mean sheket bevakasha, which means "quiet please."
American football: bevakasha lelamed oti lesakhek bekadur regel amerikani. Soccer: bevakasha lelamed oti lesakhek bekadur regel.
"Please" in Hebrew is "Bevakasha" (בבקשה).
If you mean "no trouble" as a response to "thank you", there is no equivalent phrase. You would just say bevakasha (בבקשה) or al lo davar (על לא דבר), both of which just mean "you're welcome". If you mean "no trouble" literally, as in "there isn't any trouble", it is eyn tsarah (אין צרה).
bevakasha lo lintosh oti (בבקשה לא ×œ× ×˜×•×© אותי)
You can't say anything like this in Hebrew because the response to "thank you" is quite different. You can only say: al lo davar (על לא דבר) = literally means "on no matter" bevakasha (בבקשה) = literally means "in a request" (also used as "please").
If you are responding to "Thank you," you would say bevakasha (בבקשה) to anyone.If you are indicating that someone is welcome [in your home, etc.], you would say brucha haba'a (ברוכה הבאה) to a female.
if this is a response to "thank you", then there's no equivalent phrase in Hebrew. You would respond: bevakasha (בבקשה) which means, "you're welcome" (literally: "in a request"). You could also answer al lo davar (על לא דבר) (literally: "on nothing").
Mean is the average.
It mean what you don't what does it mean.
he was a mean person who lived with mean people in a mean castle on a mean hill in a mean country in a mean continent in a mean world in a mean solar system in a mean galaxy in a mean universe in a mean dimension