The third part of this tutorial teaches you how to apply eyeliner to create a clean and fresh look for your interview. Following the eye makeup, refined lip makeup is needed to finish the look.
The eyebrows play a very important role in makeup.The second part of this makeup tutorial teaches you the eyebrows that you should use for an interview.
This tutorial teaches you how to do makeup for interviews to give a good first impression to your potential employers. Part one explains how to choose and apply base.
Let's review the vocabulary again for wind, cloud, water and fire.
Let's put Wind, Cloud, Fire and Water back where they belong!
Wind, Cloud, Fire and Water can't seem to find their way home!
The idiom of "Bai Fa Bai Zhong" comes from a legend about an amazing archer in ancient China. See what he did to earn his place in the Chinese lexicon.
Learn how the story of two impostors inspired the idiom, "To catch a turtle in a jar" (To go after easy prey).
This cute introductory video helps Chinese learners learn the characters for "fu," (father) "mu," (mother) "ma," (mommy) and "ba" (daddy).
The second part of the story about China’s Eight Taoist Immortals.
Learn how a trusting shepherd inspired the idiom, "To usher the wolf into the house" (To ask for trouble).
Learn in the fastest and easiest way possible how to effectively remember some characters that express movement.
The first part of the story about China's Eight Taoist Immortals.
The story continues with Liu Bang plotting to seize the strategically-important Guanzhong area with a clever tactic of deception dubbed "To Secretly Cross at Chencang." After defeating Xiang Yu, Liu Bang went on to found the Han Dynasty.
Learn about the characters used to talk about time by watching this fun and thorough explanation of how to write them and how they came about.
The story behind this idiom about deception comes from one of the most famous and fabled chapters in Chinese history, the much-dramatized rivalry between Xiang Yu and Liu Bang. After both generals helped to bring down the Qin Dynasty, Xiang Yu divided China into 18 kingdoms, taking vast, fertile territory for himself and giving Liu Bang remote, mountainous land.
Learn a simple, fun way to say the four directions in Chinese as well as how to remember how to write them.
Find out how a passage from Cao Pi inspired the saying "to draw cakes to allay hunger" (To comfort oneself with illusions).
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