Good afternoon to you from the island that I'm from π―π² , it's okay when you ignore my message as you don't see it because i am black or not your type , i get the Jeff because i am not the type of guy you want to communicate with , you judge the book by its cover , I'm different from the type of guys you answer too and i congratulate you on what you do to sensitize the weak mind mindset , yes you beautiful and might look gorgeous behind that you have on but i see beautiful ladies just as you and i don't get that kind of way from them that my spirit don't like as a person ,, my spirit tell me to walk away from this video clip and congratulate you on your video good bye and merry Christmas when it comes , i will not come back on your video clip even when you share it with me , keep safe and be loving good bye again ππ
@jensandersofficial 1:03:48 Jen I must compliment you on your excellent supershort mini Halloween outfit choice, your fabulously sexy and exquisitely intelligent and relaxing voice, the figure I know you work extremely hard to maintain and you breathtaking, flawless world class legs. You have several bodycon minis and killer heels that I thought you couldnβt top. I was wrong. You have truly outdone yourself princess! π¦π¦π¦π¦ππ€€ππβ
I love your cooking videos best! You always look so lovely and the idea of cooking and modelling at the same time is quite a good one! π₯π
I can tell you from experience that learning Mandarin Chinese language is actually quite easy – at least as far as speaking it and hearing it goes. There are no genders for nouns like in Latin languages and more importantly there are no tenses for the verbs! Every verb is just the one word! Tense is expressed through modifiers placed at the beginning of the sentence, like "yesterday I go to market". Sentence structure in Mandarin is the same as in English – adjective before the noun, subject – verb – object.
The no genders thing is confusing for the Chinese when they visit foreign countries. Often a Chinese speaker will refer to a female as "he". The speaker doesn't believe that the female looks masculine – rather, the speaker remembers only the one pronoun for both genders.
Now, reading characters, even the "simplified" characters introduced by Mao, is far more difficult than learning an alphabet as we do in most Western languages. Characters symbolise whole words or thoughts, and the Chinese love to contract their phrases to just four syllables, meaning that they leave a lot out that new learners find very confusing. In China, signs and commercials use the Chinese version of "italics" and "bold" which are sometimes unintelligible even to someone who knows a lot of characters. Also, there is a "cursive" (handwritten) version of the characters to make things even more difficult.
Of course WRITING the characters is literally an art form. I did not even attempt to learn how to write Mandarin characters. I learned a few semesters of Mandarin from an older woman who taught the language "on the side" from her regular job. She had so many funny stories, many of which had morals that are the same in both the East and the West, like "where there is a will there's a way" and respect for elders, and some that were quite different!
I know that you have so much on your plate now, but maybe in your later years, you may want to give learning Mandarin a go! Learning languages is the best way to learn about culture!
Yum
Cat women why you not aloud to have a whip in your videos?? You would look amazing with a whip in black latex and 10 inch pleaser boots π€©π€©π€©
Hi Jen beautiful outfitβ€
Cat women are you a dominatrix??
Super Beautiful Goddess ππππ
Youβre looking cute in that bodysuit π 38:20
Gorgeous πβ€
So sexy and beautiful be my wife and my lover
Good afternoon to you from the island that I'm from π―π² , it's okay when you ignore my message as you don't see it because i am black or not your type , i get the Jeff because i am not the type of guy you want to communicate with , you judge the book by its cover , I'm different from the type of guys you answer too and i congratulate you on what you do to sensitize the weak mind mindset , yes you beautiful and might look gorgeous behind that you have on but i see beautiful ladies just as you and i don't get that kind of way from them that my spirit don't like as a person ,, my spirit tell me to walk away from this video clip and congratulate you on your video good bye and merry Christmas when it comes , i will not come back on your video clip even when you share it with me , keep safe and be loving good bye again ππ
Beautiful β€οΈ
@jensandersofficial 1:03:48 Jen I must compliment you on your excellent supershort mini Halloween outfit choice, your fabulously sexy and exquisitely intelligent and relaxing voice, the figure I know you work extremely hard to maintain and you breathtaking, flawless world class legs. You have several bodycon minis and killer heels that I thought you couldnβt top. I was wrong. You have truly outdone yourself princess! π¦π¦π¦π¦ππ€€ππβ
Good morning beautiful looking sexy in latex π₯ππ
I love your cooking videos best! You always look so lovely and the idea of cooking and modelling at the same time is quite a good one! π₯π
I can tell you from experience that learning Mandarin Chinese language is actually quite easy – at least as far as speaking it and hearing it goes. There are no genders for nouns like in Latin languages and more importantly there are no tenses for the verbs! Every verb is just the one word! Tense is expressed through modifiers placed at the beginning of the sentence, like "yesterday I go to market". Sentence structure in Mandarin is the same as in English – adjective before the noun, subject – verb – object.
The no genders thing is confusing for the Chinese when they visit foreign countries. Often a Chinese speaker will refer to a female as "he". The speaker doesn't believe that the female looks masculine – rather, the speaker remembers only the one pronoun for both genders.
Now, reading characters, even the "simplified" characters introduced by Mao, is far more difficult than learning an alphabet as we do in most Western languages. Characters symbolise whole words or thoughts, and the Chinese love to contract their phrases to just four syllables, meaning that they leave a lot out that new learners find very confusing. In China, signs and commercials use the Chinese version of "italics" and "bold" which are sometimes unintelligible even to someone who knows a lot of characters. Also, there is a "cursive" (handwritten) version of the characters to make things even more difficult.
Of course WRITING the characters is literally an art form. I did not even attempt to learn how to write Mandarin characters. I learned a few semesters of Mandarin from an older woman who taught the language "on the side" from her regular job. She had so many funny stories, many of which had morals that are the same in both the East and the West, like "where there is a will there's a way" and respect for elders, and some that were quite different!
I know that you have so much on your plate now, but maybe in your later years, you may want to give learning Mandarin a go! Learning languages is the best way to learn about culture!