"Sto lat" in Polish means "a hundred years" and is commonly used to wish someone a long and healthy life, especially on their birthday.
It is actually "sto lat" and it means one hundred years. You often hear the song "Sto lat, sto lat ..." when someone is singing Happy Birthday to another person because they are essentially wishing them 100 years of life. But there is also another song that follows this one, which is "sto za malo, sto za malo ..." which means that 100 years is too little of an amount and then it continues to 150 years of life. Polish people usually sing this to celebrate a person or an occasion, such as a birthday.
100 in polish is sto.
100 in polish is sto.
Oh, dude, "Sto Lot" in Polish literally means "One Hundred Flights." But like, don't get too excited, it's not about jet-setting or anything. It's just a casual way to wish someone good luck, kind of like saying "break a leg" in English. So, if someone tells you "Sto Lot," just smile and nod, no need to start booking those plane tickets.
LOT means 'flight' in Polish, just that.
Sto (100) lat (years)
Sto = I stand
Sto lat means "one hundred years". In Poland, they sing this on birthdays as a kind of birthday song so that they wish people to live 100 years.
Lot means flight in Polish.
There are many toast in Polish languages. The most popular are "Wasze zdrowie" (about health) or "Sto lat" (long life).
"To."