Depends on the context:
"Put" (affirmative informal usage only) It is a form of the word "to put" Poner.
Put your name here. > Pon tu nómbre aquí. (formal) Ponga su nómbre aquí.
It could also be a slang for getting a ride from some one or hitchhiking. In this case it's a noun. You get or grab "pon". Though this term was used widely in Puerto Rico in the 1960s-1980s it may have fallen out of favor and the term was not universal.
I was able to hitch a ride > Conseguí pon
Pon in Spanish is a conjugation of the word put. Pon means to put or have put in the Spanish language.
'Pon' is an imperative form (command) of 'poner', 'to put.' It's the second person singular familiar (tú) version of the command. It would be equivalent to the 'put' in, "Put it over there."
The word Pontiac is pronounced as "PON-tee-ak."
pon tu cenar
The correct pronunciation is "koo-pon."
position or coupon
As far as I can find out, neither of these words are a root word.
esponja (ess-pon-ha)
"coo" - "pon"
dog
afuras is not a spanish word.
It is the Spanish word for "fox".