"Lavo" is an Italian word that translates to "I wash" in English. It is the first-person singular form of the verb "lavare," which means "to wash." The term is commonly used in the context of personal hygiene or cleaning items.
No - it does not mean Jackie in english. "Hedwig" is the English language equivalent for "Jadwiga"
quoi is 'what' in English.
That is mean Emily in English.
What does Arabic word inshallala mean in English
cibai in english mean cibai
i wash
i think you heard "lavo" which is "i wash"
lavó (לבוא) = "to come"
Lavo Čermelj was born in 1889.
Lavo Čermelj died in 1980.
Lavo Kingdom ended in 1388.
Lavo C ermelj has written: 'Life-and-death struggle of a national minority'
Lavo I vestiti
Lavo with a macron over the "o."
You say "lavo" in Esperanto.
Lavo, Lavare, Lavi, Lautus (or Lotus): to wash
'A verb is reflexive' = 'un verbo es reflexivo'. What it means, is that (generally, in English as well as Spanish and other languages) a verb is accompanied by '(my/your/him/her/its)self' or '(our/your/their)selves'; (or the equivalent so-called 'reflexive pronoun(s)' in other languages. In Spanish, 'me/te/se/le/nos/os/les'). E.g. I wash the windows = Lavo las ventanas I wash myself/you wash yourself, etc. = me lavo/te lavas, etc. In Spanish you also use the reflexive if you say 'I wash my hands' = me lavo las manos (literally: I wash myself the hands).