yes
The wordsstudent, apprentice, acolyte and pupilcan be used to describe someone who is being taught, depending on the context.
Some words to describe a person beginning with the letter U are:ubiquitousUGLYunbelievableUkrainianUncleunctuousunderstandinguniqueunlikelyunluckyunrulyunusual
outstanding
Glutton
No, "greenhorn" is a term used to describe an inexperienced or naive person, not an animal.
The word used to describe an English speaking person is 'Anglophone.' Similarly, the word used to describe a French speaking person is 'Francophone.'
No, its a word used to describe a person who is new to something. Like a rookie.
lame
You can use the word "lame" to describe something that is uninteresting, weak, or unsatisfactory. For example, "The movie was so lame that I fell asleep halfway through."
In Costa Rica, the word polo is used to describe a person, object or situation that would be considered lame in terms of acceptable popular social standards. Other terms that are similar synonyms of polo but not quite the exact translation could be: uncool, lame, dorky, etc...
The word personification is a noun, a word for a person. An adjective is a describing word; you would describe the noun personification with an adjective. An example is 'a perfectpersonification'.
Grounded
Lame is a real word, laim, however is not. so, in the spelling, the answer is no. Lame can either mean something that can't walk properly, usually a horse, or it is American teenage slang for something that is rubbish, not what the person wanted or expected. a Lamo (lame-o) is a person who is 'lame'.
Zest could be used to describe a quality person who is filled with enthusiasm and energy.
That is called a lame duck. It will not fly again.
The word used to describe an emotionally healthy person is "sane".