चुप = QUIET. Usage : apart from hearing sporadic gunfire, the day was pretty quiet. (Verb) 0. चुप = UNWEPT. Usage : the fallen soldier's sacrifice went unwept by many.
so in english, chup karo means “shut up,” while chup raho is closer to “stay quiet.” so if you want to tell someone to be quiet, and you're saying it for the first time, you'd say chup karo.
"Jai ho" (Hindi: जय हो, /d͡ʒeː ɦoː/), also transliterated "Jaya ho", is a Hindi phrase which can be roughly translated as "Let [the] victory prevail", "Let there be victory", or "May there be victory", "Victory be to".
(BEE-dee) A cigarette made by rolling tobacco by hand in a dried leaf from the tendu tree (a member of the ebony family). Most bidis are made in India, and they come in different flavors.
And then up in Scotland especially, it's used quite nastily, as a term of abuse - you know, somebody might say 'you manky so and so', that's really quite harsh.
"Oggy" is a slang term for a Cornish pasty derived from its Cornish language name, "hogen", and was used by local Cornish sailors throughout Cornwall as well as at the Devonport Dockyard in reference to pasty sellers who stand outside the gates.
chop – (From Malay cap, which is from Hindi छाप ćhāp, lit. stamp) Refers to stamp or seal. chop chop – (From English) Used to tell someone to do something fast. chope – Slang for reserving a seat.
Listen to pronunciation. (KREE-tek) A type of cigarette that is made in Indonesia. It is made using a mixture of tobacco, cloves, and other ingredients.
A beedi (also spelled bidi or biri) is a thin cigarette or mini-cigar filled with tobacco flake and commonly wrapped in a tendu (Diospyros melanoxylon) or Piliostigma racemosum leaf tied with a string or adhesive at one end. It originates from the Indian subcontinent.