Covers The song was covered in Turkish by
Tarkan for his debut album
Yine Sensiz (1992) under the title "Kimdi". It was also covered in Persian by
Andy as "Laili" for his similarly titled album
Laili, and in Greek as
Giorgos Alkaios's debut single "Ti Ti". In 1993 it was also covered in Spanish by
Antonio Carbonell. In the 1990s, it was also covered in Albanian as "Ti më bën xheloz" by the Band Ilirët. There was also an
Urdu version of the song, "
Babia" (1993), by
Sajjad Ali. In India, versions of the song became popular through plagiarized versions in local Indian languages. A popular version was the
Hindi song "Ladki Ladki" in the
Bollywood movie
Shreemaan Aashique (1993), arranged by
Nadeem-Shravan. A Serbian copy was released by
Dragana Mirković as "Baš tebe volim ja" in 1993. The title was also covered in
Russian language by Tatiana Parez in September 2004, who released it as CD maxi. In 2007 the song was covered by a German girls band
Milk & Honey, in an Arab and partial French translation. In 2022 a Greek version was made by the Greek famous singer
Helena Paparizou &
Antique named "Ti Ti"
Samples and adaptations This song was sampled loosely in the 1994 film
Brahma by
Bappi Lahiri and
Kavita Krishnamurthy called Suno Suno Meri Rani Ji. In 2007 a sample of the song was used in a song of the American singer
Amerie in the song titled "Losing U" in her album
Because I Love It.
Films The song was almost completely featured in the 1995
Malayalam movie,
Highway, with actress
Silk Smitha dancing to the tunes. Just prior to the song, there is a brief part which shows the original song video by Khalid, being played on a television set. A 2016 Bollywood movie named
Airlift covered this song in Hindi as "Dil Cheez Tujhe De Di" sung by
Arijit Singh and
Ankit Tiwari. A 2020 Indian movie in Malayalam named
Dhamaka covered this song in Malayalam as "Potti Potti" composed by
Gopi Sundar. The song was remixed as "Didi (Sher-e-Baloch)" in the 2026
Hindi film
Dhurandhar: The Revenge. Television It was sung by
Red Dagger to
Kamala Khan in the TV series
Ms. Marvel. In 1995, the song was sung by Sri Lankan singer
Bathiya Jayakody and Gaminda Priyaviraj (later known for his work in the television series
Api Nodanna Live) in a live recording that was televised on the local television channel
TNL. == Plagiarism controversies ==