Literally "that which might be," commonly translated as "whatever".
Lo que pasó means "that which happened," or "what occurred." Lo que pasó es que hablábamos= What happened is (that) we were talking
"Lo que está haciendo" means "what he/she/it is doing" in Spanish.
"Lo que idiota" is not a coherent phrase in Spanish. "Lo que" translates to "what" and "idiota" means "idiot," so it could be an incomplete or incorrect expression.
lo que saltan
It means "Did you understand what I said?"
Spanish sea lo que sea means "come what may".
Something is lame
Lo que sea Lo que fuera-fuese Lo que fuere
Sea lo que sea.
sea lo que sea
Sea lo que sea chica
It depends on how you mean it.If it is simply a part of a sentence, it would "Cualquiera cosa". For example: "I want whatever he's eating." is "Yo quiero cualquiera cosa que él come."If you mean it as an interjection to dismiss what the other person is saying, it would be, "Sea lo que sea".
Lo que pasó means "that which happened," or "what occurred." Lo que pasó es que hablábamos= What happened is (that) we were talking
"Lo que está haciendo" means "what he/she/it is doing" in Spanish.
Lo que sea necesario
Lo que sea necesario
I think you mean 'dame lo que quiero'. That's Spanish for 'Give me what I want'.