"Rok Sako Toh Rok Lo" is a Hindi phrase that translates to "Stop me if you can" in English. It is often used to convey determination and a challenge to others to try and stop the speaker from achieving their goals.
"Lo dejo" in Spanish can mean "I leave it" or "I quit." The exact meaning can depend on the context in which it is used.
It means "I knew it"
"Lo quiero" in Spanish translates to "I want it" in English.
"Lo sé" in English translates to "I know" or "I know it."
"Lo que está haciendo" means "what he/she/it is doing" in Spanish.
Rok Sako To Rok Lo was created on 2004-12-10.
The cast of Rok Sako To Rok Lo - 2004 includes: Tinnu Anand as S.V.P.S, Balasubramaniam Iyer Rakesh Bedi as Ghodbole Shreya Das Jehan Hillowalla Rajit Kapoor Carran Kapur as Ranveer Pratap Singh Aparna Kumar as Sanjana Ram Menon Yash Pandit as Dev Manjari Phadnis as Suhana Karun Punchi Archana Puran Singh as Sweety Shriya Saran Abbas Saria Ajay Sheoparna Namrata Shirodkar as Sandra (Narrator) Anjan Srivastav as Ganguly
Ram Menon has: Performed in "Rok Sako To Rok Lo" in 2004. Played Pundorikhakshya Purokayashtha in "Home Delivery: Aapko... Ghar Tak" in 2005. Performed in "Paa" in 2009. Played Alok in "Bawra Mann" in 2011. Played Himself - Interviewer in "Ring Ka King" in 2012.
PRONOUNCE: LOH SYEHN-toh Writing: Lo Siento
You did it (Lo hiciste)
you mean "lo solo" or smth like that? that means: just IT/this
"Cómo lo hacen" = "How do they do it?" or "How is it done?"
Te lo mereces > you deserve it.
"No te lo comas" is Spanish for "Do not eat it".
Mi hai rubato lo scooter! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "You have stolen my scooter!"Specifically, the personal pronoun mi is "me". The auxiliary hai and the past participle rubato mean "(informal singular you) have stolen". The masculine singular definite article lo means "the". The masculine noun scooter serves as an English loan word.The pronunciation will be "mee eye roo-BA-toh lo SKOO-ter" in Italian.
"Lo dejo" in Spanish can mean "I leave it" or "I quit." The exact meaning can depend on the context in which it is used.
The word lo in the Italian language translates into English as the word the. The word lo in Spanish translates as it.