I think you mean, "puedes poner una foto tuya" and it means if you can put a picture of you (post or upload in the internet probably)
Poned is the pronunciation of "pwned" (beaten, dominated) as used by the Jonas Brothers to mean "let down by someone better then you." It is inscribed on Nick Jonas' purity ring.Poned (pwned) comes from the word "owned" as in totally bested, and can be either transitive-active or intransitive-passive (e.g. I pwned him, or he was pwned).
It means, "If God be for us, who can be against us?"
To say to put on in spanish is poner. poner congregated Pongo, pones, pone, ponemos, poneis, ponen Me pongo maquillaje..........I put on makeup
"Wyatt" would be spelled in the exact same way. This is because names don't change from pone language to another. However, if you want the closest phonetic spelling of "Wyatt" in Spanish, it would be "Wait."
phone, moan, drone, scone, tone, bone, loan, pown, sewn, zone Phone, lone, own, bone, moan, throne, loan, clone, telephone, roan, prone, stone, blown, grown, alone, debone, dethrone, cone, hone, sewn, tone.bone,lone,hone,tone,done,rone,wone,kone,mone,cone,pone,done,gone,
"Como se pone" in Spanish can mean "how is it worn" or "how do you put it on," depending on the context. It is a phrase commonly used when asking how to use or wear something.
Pone is a variation of Poner (to put) Depending on the context, pone can mean "you put" or "He/she/it put"
There's nothing called pone ski. Pone is bread made by Native Americans.
En ingles, es "How to set iGoogle in English?"
Gundaris Pone was born in 1932.
Gundaris Pone died in 1994.
Stavri Pone was born in 1942.
"Prepone" IS actually a common term, an English word, but is not "American" English, hence not in the American dictionary. Used commonly in India.'Prepone' is not an English word.It's commonly used in Indian subcontinent to mean the opposite of 'post-pone', but the rest of the world is largely unaware of it.
"Se pone el huevo en la plata, ¿no?" translates to "Does the egg go in the silver (container), right?" in English. It's a colloquial way of asking if something is ready or needs to be placed in a specific location.
El pone. Yo Pongo
Pone Kingpetch was born on 1935-02-12.
Pone Kingpetch died on 1982-03-31.