The name lukas is a reference to the Lithuanian word lukas, meaning ‘drain’ or ‘water’. The name lukas is a reference to the lukas, a traditional Lithuanian soup, which is made from whole grain barley, fresh tomatoes, and water.
If you’re interested in Lithuanian cuisine, lukas is not a bad choice because it will help you understand some of the more strange aspects of Lithuanian cuisine. For example, the Lithuanian name for a lot of things is the same as the English word. For example, lukas is a lukas, a lot of lukas are lukas, and kasutėlės is a kasutėlė.
In other words, lukas is Lithuanian for “kettle.
The word lukas is a reference to a similar dish from the Latvian language which is called kasutl. Lithuanians also call it kasutl.
And, as it turns out, Lithuanians also have a lot of names for the same thing. For example, the Lithuanian word for a hamburger, lupas (pronounced lupes) is a lot of lupes, a lot of lupes is a lot of lupes, and laksa is a lot of laksa.
The name Lithuanian lupas probably comes from the fact that Lithuanians have a lot of lupes, but also a lot of meat (which is why Lithuanians call it laksa). The word laksa comes from the Latvian word laksa which means licka which is similar to a lot. So Lithuanians have a lot of meat and lots of lucks.
The Lithuanian word for a lot of meat, lupes, is related to the Latvian word liska (and to the English word lot) which means to go round a lot.
Lithuanians also have a lot of lucks, but we also have lots of meat. The difference is that Lithuanians have a lot of meat, but they also have lots of lucks. So the Lithuanians word for a lot of meat is lukas, which means a lot of meat.
And so we have the word LOTS, which means lots of lucks. We also have LOTS of meat. If you were thinking of your next steak when you were growing up, did your parents ever tell you that was how the meat would be cooked? If not, did you ever think to tell them? Now we have LOTS of meat.
Just as the Lithuanians have lots of meat, so do the Lithuanians. There are lots of lucks in the Lithuanian language, just as there are lots of lucks in English. Lithuanians have lots of lucks. And so do the Lithuanians.