Man, this joke's odd. Me!
It is tricky. Yes you are the pilot.But none of the answers point to that.I would say. . .yes you are the pilot and you can tell.
He would say guess. As in this line from Titus Andronicus: "My lord, I know not, I, nor can I guess".
There is no password. There is a word that the Knights who say Nee could not say, which was "it". Not only would they not say the word, to hear the word would caused them pain.
The same way you would say it in America........ please
i would have to say around ten years old but if your a super protective parent then i would say 13
An airplane, because it starts with a vowel sound. (In the UK you would say an aeroplane.)
To ask someone what the word for "airplane" is in Spanish, you would say "¿Cómo se dice "airplane" en español?"
hablo con Geronimo
sauté is how you say "jumped off" in French.
You would say "We went sky diving last Sunday" "Did you just hear that Susan went Sky Diving?" "James jumped out of the airplane without hesitation and it was the greatest example of sky diving I have ever seen"
Book doesn't say so...I think not.
I would say no.
I would ask the airline personnel . They will tell you if you can. Do what they say.
I would say that's correct.
I would say maybe Wilma Mankiller? by:http://wiki.answers.com/Q/User:Histodc98Xingman says Geronimo is the person
Answer 1There is no such word as learnt. (In fact, Chambers and other dictionaries give it as an alternative to 'learned' - which I must say, I personally prefer)However, both are possible.Answer 2"Learned" in English is both the past simple of "to learn" and the past participle. Most verbs in English have the same past simple and past participle of which a example would be "jumped" and "jumped" - he jumped and he has jumped. An example of where they differ would be "went" and "gone" - he went and he has gone. Learnt is exclusively a past participle. You can say he has learned or he has learnt but you can NOT say he learnt where you CAN say he learned.
Jermino (Hermino). and for Jerome its Geronimo.