: Indicates the source of the video. An "HDRip" is typically a high-definition encode taken from a digital source like a web stream or a high-quality retail file.

: These are language tags for Telugu, Tamil, and Hindi . This indicates that the file is "multi-audio," containing dubbed tracks for these three languages alongside or instead of the original English.

: The vertical resolution. This is standard definition (SD), which explains why the file size can be as low as 500MB.

This naming style is designed to be for users browsing large databases or forums. It follows a "General-to-Specific" hierarchy, allowing users to quickly verify if the file has the specific language dubs they need or if the file size fits their available storage or data limits.

: The title and official release year of the film.

: The approximate file size. For a modern feature-length film, this is quite small, suggesting significant compression.

: The file extension for the Matroska Multimedia Container, which is popular because it can hold multiple audio tracks and subtitle streams in a single file. Why this format exists