 I bring you a common mistake that a lot of beginner students do when they start to learn the Arabic language, especially those who their mother tongue is the English language. Now these mistakes will make you sound less fluent, not only sound but as well when writing, if you are expressing yourself through writing, it will make you seem less fluent and less mutqin, less skillful in the Arabic language. Now let's look at the source of this problem. The source of this problem is the fact that many students in the beginning of learning the Arabic language, they translate in their minds before they actually speak. So, for example, in the examples of he came and spoke to me, a very simple sentence, he came and spoke to me. They would say, or they would say, I will go and come back, or they would say, she called me and said, and so on, so on, so on. Mentioning the dameel before every sentence or before every verb, it makes it sound repetitive. The reason why is because the verb itself, if you say it ta-salat, that verb already holds the meaning of she called me. So I don't have to repeat the she, the same as if I say, jaa'a fa kalamani, that verb already holds the meaning of that pronoun of he. So I don't have to say he as in hua ja'a because now I'm repeating the dameel, the pronoun twice. So it sounds repetitive, which sounds not natural to the ear that's accustomed to the Arabic language, to the fluency of the Arabic language. And the reason why I say in the beginning that this happens mostly with the students who their mother tongue is the English language is because, for example, in my mother tongue in the Spanish language, we don't use those type of structures when it comes to a sentence. So we say, for example, bino y se fue, we don't say el, which is the pronoun for he. We say bino straight away. And this is another evidence that the Spanish language, they took a lot from the 800 years that the Muslims and, of course, the Arabs, you know, were living in the Iberian Peninsula, which is today the Spanish Empire. So that was just a side note for the fa'idah. Here it is why I think that someone who knows different languages is more capable to teach you than someone who only knows his language because he haven't gone through the process. It's just like, you know, a person who have, you know, gained his spot in the NBA, it's not like the son of LeBron James, who was full of plugs and he just needed to be a little skillful and get a few opportunities in the league through his father. It's not the same, the one that came from the gutter than the one that actually achieved it. So I feel like the program that I have designed under the Institute is very useful for the student who's starting from zero from the very beginning. And the reason why is because I know what you're struggling with and I know why you're making that mistake. For example, there was once a student, he said, he said, qadaytu al-malakullahu or something like that. Qadayt means spend. If you go into the dictionary, English, Arabic, you will say spend. You will see spend and amfaqa is as well spent. However, amfaqa is spend when it comes to related to money and qadayt is spend when it comes to spending time. So, you know, if you don't, if I didn't know what he meant, like, oh, OK, you say and spend because you think that spend is the same as money and spending time, if I didn't know that it would have taken, maybe he would have lost that fact, maybe he would have, the teacher wouldn't, wouldn't even have given him the fact that benefit because he wouldn't understand where, why he's making that mistake. Or maybe, you know, it would have taken, you know, month for, for him to realize that, OK, so qadayt means these and amfaqa means for these other contexts, etc. So, so that to say that, Alhamdulillah, I take pride for what we have built with Andrews Institute. I highly encourage you guys to check it out. You don't lose anything. The worst that can happen is that you leave with three or four or five benefits after watching the presentation that I have prepared through the link in the bio, which explains basically how I became fluent in the Arabic language myself in the space of a year. So yeah, I highly encourage you to check that out. And inshallah, I'll see you guys on the other side. Salam alaikum.