I was writing an English translation by listening to saraiki/punjabi/panjabi song 'maikun eihotan dasa kewen jor', as i mostly understand all of this language, but i was stuck on a line, i could translate it by focusing and relistening that line a lot of times and scratching my head, but that line doesnt feel like it fits in the context.

the line that confused me is 'shahzaad asaan de lai laahne ho';after some brainstorming i got that 'shahzaad' is 'prince', 'asaan de lai' would mean 'for us' but cant conclude what this line means by saying 'they would bring prince for us???', this line does not seem to fit the context. Does it have some metaphoric meaning or some other translation?


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this song "maikun eihotan dasa kewen jor" does not have an english translation anywhere on web, though it has a spanish translation (thanks to mexicana en pakistan youtube channel but the translation of that specific line there also doesnt seem to be exact or correct) (saraiki learning channel has a hindi/urdu translation of this song but the translation starts from the song and not the poetic line before the song and this line which i am stuck on is in that poetic paragraph).

Lately, Rubina Dilaik, renowned for her role in Choti Bahu, has been in the headlines. There have been ongoing speculations about her pregnancy for some time now. It is being reported that the actress is in the early stages of her pregnancy, expecting her first child with actor Abhinav Shukla, and is currently four months pregnant. Although Rubina has denied these pregnancy rumors, certain pictures on her social media have sparked suspicions to the contrary. Amid all these rumors, Rubina has posted a video on her social media handle and is seen dancing to a viral song. The actress is seen grooving to a popular viral song, much to the delight of the fans.Related Storytv

Shakti Astitva Ke Ehsaas Ki actress today posted a video of her on her social media page where she is seen dancing to a popular viral song Dame Tu Cosita in a hotel room. Fans got excited to see her groove and commented on her post.

During the last year or so, I, like many Google Play Music (RIP) users found myself lost and confused, adrift in a sea of much worse music library services, because Google decided to kill the service and replace it with YouTube Music. My music library, that had been lovingly purchased and curated over years was transferred over to YouTube Music, where I now had to stream my own music because "most people stream music rather than own music" . You have to pay for the premium service to be able to download *your own music* so that you can listen to it without streaming.

The YouTube video and music libraries are populated by ordinary people, and the libraries contain recordings of prayers or of mantras as well as music videos and songs uploaded by unknown artists and megastars alike. Any upload to YouTube can be tagged or labelled by users with any text, so that their content item can be found more easily in the future by them and other users. Each music item may also be labelled by the user that uploads them, or otherwise, to enable playlists to be generated by an algorithm. The labels might describe the genre of music (e.g. hip-hop, meditation, or bossa nova), or the language(s), the artist(s), or the most appropriate 'theme' (such as chillout, workout, etc.) YouTube clearly knows that I listen to lots of music in Punjabi, and therefore, deemed it appropriate to generate a chillout mix that pulled in music that is labelled as "Punjabi". It also knew to create a slow tempo playlist. And it knows how to transition smoothly between items in the playlist so that the end result is not jarring. However, what I'm guessing it didn't know is that the content of the audio also matters. Perhaps there are currently no labels that could help to distinguish between prayers and music. If YouTube employees are involved in correctly tagging/labelling content, they also have a problem: it can be difficult for people who aren't familiar with a culture, religion or language to know the difference between prayers and music you can dance or chillout to. For example, there are lots of YouTube videos of kirtans, which in Sikhism, are scriptures that are recited as a song and accompanied by musical instruments. Similarly, gospel music is a genre of Christian music and not necessarily something that should pop-up in auto-generated playlists. It's also potentially offensive that sacred words and scriptures are being interspersed among acoustic cover songs. 006ab0faaa

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