<p>can you take up a new language and take like a beginners class?</p>
<p>yes, in a word.</p>
<p>in a word?</p>
<p>yes is 1 word</p>
<p>anyways...thast cool because i would love to learn Spanish</p>
<p>I said "Yes" is your answer "in one/[a] word," as I didn't need any more to answer your question.</p>
<p>But you needed a few more characters to make the 10-character minimum.</p>
<p>which is hy he said..., in a word</p>
<p>you guys are so frickin smart...i wish i could go to a great school like you do :D</p>
<p>hahaha arjun needs to learn English before proceeding to Spanish...
Arjun tiene que apprendir como hablar ingles antes esta siguiendo a la lengua de espanol.</p>
<p>:D can someone who is fluent in the language tell me how i did?</p>
<p>Arjun you have to learn how to speak english before you pursue the spanish language</p>
<p>actually it's "Arjun has to" (I really doubt ducky is holding arjun is a position of high respect and using the third personish tense :p) and lengua usually means tongue...as in the thing in your mouth. "idioma" is unequivocally "language."</p>
<p>ok thx sparty! i just started last term. i suck at it, but i wanna get better. so what would the correct sentence be?</p>
<p>and i meant that...arjun has to...as in HE has to so i think 3rd person works right?</p>
<p>is a HE, he sounds like SHE</p>
<p>L O L :)</p>
<p>bball87, no way i sound like a SHE!!!</p>
<p>i'm as macho as 6'5" sparty and body-buildin Metallic-Maniac!!!</p>
<p>actualy i hope u guys can pronounce Arjun!!!</p>
<p>WHY I ASK?? because many of my cousin's now in US, who have US accent, call me Ar-z-un...whiuch became Arzo and then Azo...which is a nitrogen substituent in organic compounds...</p>
<p>weird...ut since then ive never gotten over my fear of Ar-z-un</p>
<p>Dude, I'm not a body-builder. I just happen to do a bit of weightlifting.</p>
<p>arjun finds any level of weightlifting to be bodybuilding. its what he aspires to :)</p>