Give me it. It, in this case, is masculine.
Being a opera singer
the numerator is on the bottom. just remember notre dame
It's About 71 Inches
nocturno, vespertino.
False, it was 'lo'
"Dame lo mío" means "Give me what's mine," or "Give me my share."
It means "give me what I want."
"Dame lo que es mío" in Spanish translates to "Give me what is mine" in English.
Ahora translates to "Now" and dame lo mío is "give me mine" so it is "Now, give me mine"
I think you mean 'dame lo que quiero'. That's Spanish for 'Give me what I want'.
'Dame' means lady or just dame.
KLK = KE LO KE = QUE LO QUE DAME LUZ DIME A VE MONTA DIMELO KLK SE MUEVE COMO TA LA COSA K LO WHAT dame dato Most of Dominican people use this expressions when they want to say something like: (there are not in the Spanish dictionary and there are extremely INFORMAL) what` s up? HOW`S GOING? WHAT ARE UP TO?
The phrase "demo watashi ni suru no ha dame dame" is Japanese and translates to "but doing that to me is not allowed" or "but you can't do that to me." It expresses disapproval or a boundary being set regarding someone's actions. The word "demo" means "but," "watashi" means "I" or "me," "suru" means "to do," and "dame dame" implies something is forbidden or unacceptable.
Dame means "give me".
Dame Gothel was the name given to the wicked Enchantress that imprisions Rapunzel in a tower. In German Dame means Lady and Gothel means Godmother.
"Dámelo" (all one word) is a positive tú command meaning "Give it to me!"
It means "I knew it"