[英文學習] 我該如何學習英文?我不想走冤枉路!
這可能是我在臉書上最常收到的問題之一。如訂閱者所知,粉絲專頁為學生與老師提供大量的免費英文學習資源。有時,尤其是最近,幾乎每天都會收到這個問題。 此一問題可能表明,學習者並不清楚自己的學習目標,抑或被網路上大量的資訊所淹沒。 以下的一些資訊希望可以幫助同學找到適合自己的學習方式。
What is the best way to learn English?
This is probably one of the most common questions we get on Facebook. The page provides free learning resources to about 50K English teachers and learners, so we receive this question on a daily basis. The question shows that learners are either unclear about their own learning goals or simply overwhelmed by the vast amount of information on the web. Here are some suggestions:
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Q1. 我該如何學習英文?
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A1. 你想實現什麼目標?
首要問題應是你想藉由英文實現什麼目標?而非該如何學習英文。你是否希望能夠積極參與日常對話或想用英文發表學術論文?想到海外就讀碩士學程嗎? 制定明確的目標可以讓你有持續學習的動力,即便你的目標可能會有所改變。
What do you want to achieve?
Rather than asking what the best way to learn English is, ask yourself what you want to achieve with English? Do you want to actively participate in daily conversations or publish your thesis in English? Perhaps you would like to study abroad as a graduate student? What are your goals? Having a clear set of goals and achieving them can provide you with sustained motivation, even though your goals might change down the road.
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A2. 請考量外部因素
思考一些可能影響學習的外部因素。每天有多少時間?能與老師接觸嗎?必須在三個月內通過考試嗎?你可以每天挪出時間來長期學習並練習英文嗎?
如果如果我想學西班牙語也能有機會常接觸講西班牙語的人,我可能找一些自學教材,使自身沉浸在語言當中,並盡可能地練習。我只打算學習西語會話,因此我可能不會參加密集的西語學術寫作課程。 但是,每個人的情況都不一樣。
上述問題多數都可以克服尤其現在是遠距學習的時代,但您的目標必須務實。在滿足您需求的同時也須保持平衡。例如,我們無法每天花三個小時來學習英文,因為我們都有工作與家庭。目標愈務實與清晰,您便愈有可能實現它們。
Consider external factors
Remember, external factors can affect your learning. How much time do you have every day? Do you have access to a teacher? Do you have to pass the TOEFL or IELTS in three months? Can you set aside time every day for continuous learning?
If I were learning Spanish and I had all the time in the world, I would just find some materials online, immerse myself in the language, and practice as much as possible with Spanish speakers. However, everyone's situation is different.
Most of the problems listed above can be overcome, especially with online resources, but you still need to be realistic in setting your goals. For example, it would be immensely difficult for most to commit to studying English three hours a day because of work and family obligations. The more realistic your goals are, the more likely you are to accomplish them.
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以下資源將提供更深入的觀點:
如何學習英文來完成目標?
https://bit.ly/3bsqzXZ
如何設定目標和學習的動力:
http://bit.ly/3a4G607
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2. 哪裡可以找到適合的學習資源?適合的老師?
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A1. 資源
請參考上開答覆(目標與外部因素)。如果目標是能夠積極地參與日常對話,那麼你可能會想親臨實體教室。但有時間和足夠的金錢嗎?
線上課程也許是較佳的替代方案,但你可能會覺得制式化的課程枯燥無味,從而迅速地失去動力,可能也不會在課外時間多加練習。
Resources
Refer to your previous answers (goals and external factors). If your goal is to speak fluently, you might want to practice in a live classroom. However, do you have the time and financial means to do so?
Online classes might be a better alternative, but you might find the format dull, causing you to quickly lose motivation. These are all factors you must consider when searching for resources.
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至於教材,端視於你的初始程度與目標。你可藉由語言評估以及尋求老師的協助來確定你的初始程度。至於要挑選什麼教材,關鍵在於可理解輸入。如果挑選的教材遠遠超過目前的能力,學習的重點太多可能導致學習者者無法吸收任何新資訊。關於如何挑選教材可以參考以下的連結:
老師如何挑選教材: https://bit.ly/3e2QMhN
必須先思考並解決這些問題,他人才有辦法幫助到你。
可以把資源簡化為:
1. 老師與學習夥伴 Teachers and practice partners
2. 學習材料(課內與課外) Learning materials (In and out of the classroom)
3. 評量與回饋 Assessments and Feedback
同學可以在網路上找到大量的免費資源,但你是否知道該如何有效地運用它們?例如,僅藉由大聲讀出字典裡的單詞來練習口說,是比較沒有效率的學習方式。
你是否有位受過專業訓練且經驗豐富的老師在幫助你實現目標? 在自己的語言學習中是否足夠積極?
As for learning materials, it depends on your current level and once again, your goal. You can find a suitable starting point by taking a language assessment and asking a teacher for advice. The main point is to find resources that provide comprehensible input, information that you can understand. You want to pick materials that you can MOSTLY understand so that you can focus on key features. If you pick materials that are far beyond your current abilities (e.g. a beginning Spanish learner using doctoral dissertations to learn Spanish), you might have difficulty focusing on anything and may soon give up on your studies.
Tons of free resources can be found online, but not all of them will help you accomplish your goals. For example, it would be unwise to practice speaking by only reading aloud words in a free online dictionary. You need an experienced teacher to help you find suitable materials. You can also ask your classmates and do research on your own.
CEFR 語言能力參考架構:
https://bit.ly/3dpzcUL
Lexile (藍思閱讀分級)
http://www.toefl.com.tw/junior/about_Lexile.jsp
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以下內容或可更好地協助您了解這些問題:
高效率英文學習策略:
http://bit.ly/2w5HzUc
英語學習資源:
http://bit.ly/2klC66h
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B. 老師
尋找適合的老師是另一個常見的問題。「完美」的老師該具備哪些特質呢?是指樂於回應您問題的人嗎?還是一個受過訓練並獲得證照的教育者?抑或那個能成為你精神導師或朋友的人?
如何挑選「好老師」?
https://youtu.be/NSkVxKkdrXo
Teachers
How to find the right teacher is another common question. What qualities should the “perfect” teacher possess? Do you mean a person who is responsive to all your questions? A person who is a trained and licensed educator? Or, perhaps a person who is there to be your mentor or friend? Your peers and classmates can also be effective teachers. Ask them for advice and practice with them.
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3. 我更加困惑了。我不知道該如何開始和設定目標,也沒有足夠的動力去長期學習。該如何是好?
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A. 制定目標
同學需要有一個明確的總體目標以及較小的目標來實現。請與學校的老師或受過訓練的專業人員談一談,以協助你制定學習計劃。
你也將會需要有持久的動力來繼續前進。以下是我就該主題所寫的一些文章:
學習的動力 Motivation to Learn:
http://bit.ly/3a4G607
成長心態十大必知 10 Must-Knows for a Growth Mindset :
https://bit.ly/2WBiUCi
如何制定短期目標 How to Set & Achieve Goals:
http://bit.ly/2Rdi0aU
Setting Goals
You need to have a clear overall goal and smaller objectives to meet. Once you have them down, talk to a school teacher or a trained professional to help you create a study plan.
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這是上述技巧的總結 Steps to take:
1. 知道自己想用英文實現目標。
Know what you want to achieve.
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2. 進行適當的語言評估(或請教老師)以判斷您的初始程度。
Take a suitable language assessment (or ask a teacher) to find your starting point.
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3. 尋找一位能幫您完成目標(學習英語)的老師。
Find a teacher who can help you accomplish your language learning goals.
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4. 與老師一起制定務實且有持續性的學習計劃。
Create a realistic and sustainable study plan with a teacher.
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5. 通常,老師會提供你學習材料,但仍可依照建議與研究找尋額外的學習材料。
Usually, your teachers will provide you with learning materials, but you can still find additional materials by asking your peers and doing research.
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6. 與夥伴或學習小組一起學習和練習。
Study and practice with a partner or study group.
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7. 定期評量以確保有在進步。
Take periodic assessments to monitor your progress.
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8. 若在一段時間後仍未進步,請調整你的學習方法與計劃。務必與老師討論。
Adjust your study plan if you do not show any progress after a couple of months. Always discuss your problems with a teacher.
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9. 為自己的教育負責。不要指望他人會為你做所有事情。
Take part in your own education. Do not expect others to do everything for you.
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然而,請記得,老師也是人,儘管我們希望能幫助所有人,我們也無法為同學做所有的事。請務必多做研究也參與自己的學習。有效學習的第一步是瞭解你想實現的目標。這裡有更多的資源可以幫助你學習「如何學習」。
如何成為自主的學習者:
https://bit.ly/3dmwhMI
何謂「自主學習」?
http://bit.ly/30PxLJx
希望以上的回答對同學有幫助,也歡迎分享po文!
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英語學習資源: http://bit.ly/2klC66h
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any question so far 回答 在 護台胖犬 劉仕傑 Facebook 的最佳解答
【 黎安友專文 l 中國如何看待香港危機 】
美國哥倫比亞大學的資深中國通黎安友(Andrew Nathan)教授最近在《外交事務》(Foreign Affairs)雜誌的專文,值得一看。
黎安友是台灣許多中國研究學者的前輩級老師,小英總統去哥大演講時,正是他積極促成。小英在美國的僑宴,黎安友也是座上賓。
這篇文章的標題是:「中國如何看待香港危機:北京自我克制背後的真正原因」。
文章很長,而且用英文寫,需要花點時間閱讀。大家有空可以看看。
Andrew這篇文章的立論基礎,是來自北京核心圈的匿名說法。以他在學術界的地位,我相信他對消息來源已經做了足夠的事實查核或確認。
這篇文章,是在回答一個疑問:中共為何在香港事件如此自制?有人說是怕西方譴責,有人說是怕損害香港的金融地位。
都不是。這篇文章認為,上述兩者都不是中共的真實顧慮。
無論你多痛恨中共,你都必須真實面對你的敵人。
中共是搞經濟階級鬥爭起家的,當年用階級鬥爭打敗國民黨。而現在,中共正用這樣的思維處理香港議題。
文章有一句話:“China’s response has been rooted not in anxiety but in confidence.” 這句話道盡階級鬥爭的精髓。
中共一點都不焦慮。相反地,中共很有自信,香港的菁英階級及既得利益的收編群體,到最後會支持中共。
這個分化的心理基礎,來自經濟上的利益。
文中還提到,鄧小平當年給香港五十年的一國兩制,就是為了「給香港足夠的時間適應中共的政治系統」。
1997年,香港的GDP佔中國的18%。2018年,這個比例降到2.8%。
今日的香港經濟,在中共的評估,是香港需要中國,而不是中國需要香港。
中共正在在意的,是香港的高房價問題。香港的房價,在過去十年內三倍翻漲。
文章是這樣描述:
“Housing prices have tripled over the past decade; today, the median price of a house is more than 20 times the median gross annual household income. The median rent has increased by nearly 25 percent in the past six years. As many as 250,000 people are waiting for public housing. At the same time, income growth for many Hong Kong residents has fallen below the overall increase in cost of living.”
無論你同不同意這些說法,都請你試圖客觀地看看這篇文章。
有趣的是,黎安友在文章中部分論點引述了他的消息來源(但他並沒有加上個人評論),部分是他自己的觀察。
#護台胖犬劉仕傑
Instagram: old_dog_chasing_ball
新書:《 我在外交部工作 》
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黎安友原文:
https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/china/2019-09-30/how-china-sees-hong-kong-crisis?fbclid=IwAR2PwHns5gWrw0fT0sa5LuO8zgv4PhLmkYfegtBgoOMCD3WJFI3w5NTe0S4
How China Sees the Hong Kong Crisis
The Real Reasons Behind Beijing’s Restraint
By Andrew J. Nathan September 30, 2019
Massive and sometimes violent protests have rocked Hong Kong for over 100 days. Demonstrators have put forward five demands, of which the most radical is a call for free, direct elections of Hong Kong’s chief executive and all members of the territory’s legislature: in other words, a fully democratic system of local rule, one not controlled by Beijing. As this brazen challenge to Chinese sovereignty has played out, Beijing has made a show of amassing paramilitary forces just across the border in Shenzhen. So far, however, China has not deployed force to quell the unrest and top Chinese leaders have refrained from making public threats to do so.
Western observers who remember the violent crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators in Tiananmen Square 30 years ago have been puzzled by Beijing’s forbearance. Some have attributed Beijing’s restraint to a fear of Western condemnation if China uses force. Others have pointed to Beijing’s concern that a crackdown would damage Hong Kong’s role as a financial center for China.
But according to two Chinese scholars who have connections to regime insiders and who requested anonymity to discuss the thinking of policymakers in Beijing, China’s response has been rooted not in anxiety but in confidence. Beijing is convinced that Hong Kong’s elites and a substantial part of the public do not support the demonstrators and that what truly ails the territory are economic problems rather than political ones—in particular, a combination of stagnant incomes and rising rents. Beijing also believes that, despite the appearance of disorder, its grip on Hong Kong society remains firm. The Chinese Communist Party has long cultivated the territory’s business elites (the so-called tycoons) by offering them favorable economic access to the mainland. The party also maintains a long-standing loyal cadre of underground members in the territory. And China has forged ties with the Hong Kong labor movement and some sections of its criminal underground. Finally, Beijing believes that many ordinary citizens are fearful of change and tired of the disruption caused by the demonstrations.
Beijing therefore thinks that its local allies will stand firm and that the demonstrations will gradually lose public support and eventually die out. As the demonstrations shrink, some frustrated activists will engage in further violence, and that in turn will accelerate the movement’s decline. Meanwhile, Beijing is turning its attention to economic development projects that it believes will address some of the underlying grievances that led many people to take to the streets in the first place.
This view of the situation is held by those at the very top of the regime in Beijing, as evidenced by recent remarks made by Chinese President Xi Jinping, some of which have not been previously reported. In a speech Xi delivered in early September to a new class of rising political stars at the Central Party School in Beijing, he rejected the suggestion of some officials that China should declare a state of emergency in Hong Kong and send in the People’s Liberation Army. “That would be going down a political road of no return,” Xi said. “The central government will exercise the most patience and restraint and allow the [regional government] and the local police force to resolve the crisis.” In separate remarks that Xi made around the same time, he spelled out what he sees as the proper way to proceed: “Economic development is the only golden key to resolving all sorts of problems facing Hong Kong today.”
ONE COUNTRY, TWO SYSTEMS, MANY QUESTIONS
Chinese decision-makers are hardly surprised that Hong Kong is chafing under their rule. Beijing believes it has treated Hong Kong with a light hand and has supported the territory’s economy in many ways, especially by granting it special access to the mainland’s stocks and currency markets, exempting it from the taxes and fees that other Chinese provinces and municipalities pay the central government, and guaranteeing a reliable supply of water, electricity, gas, and food. Even so, Beijing considers disaffection among Hong Kong’s residents a natural outgrowth of the territory’s colonial British past and also a result of the continuing influence of Western values. Indeed, during the 1984 negotiations between China and the United Kingdom over Hong Kong’s future, the Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping suggested following the approach of “one country, two systems” for 50 years precisely to give people in Hong Kong plenty of time to get used to the Chinese political system.
But “one country, two systems” was never intended to result in Hong Kong spinning out of China’s control. Under the Basic Law that China crafted as Hong Kong’s “mini-constitution,” Beijing retained the right to prevent any challenge to what it considered its core security interests. The law empowered Beijing to determine if and when Hong Kongers could directly elect the territory’s leadership, allowed Beijing to veto laws passed by the Hong Kong Legislative Council, and granted China the right to make final interpretations of the Basic Law. And there would be no question about who had a monopoly of force. During the negotiations with the United Kingdom, Deng publicly rebuked a top Chinese defense official—General Geng Biao, who at the time was a patron of a rising young official named Xi Jinping—for suggesting that there might not be any need to put troops in Hong Kong. Deng insisted that a Chinese garrison was necessary to symbolize Chinese sovereignty.
Statements made by U.S. politicians in support of the recent demonstrations only confirm Beijing’s belief that Washington seeks to inflame radical sentiments in Hong Kong.
At first, Hong Kongers seemed to accept their new role as citizens of a rising China. In 1997, in a tracking poll of Hong Kong residents regularly conducted by researchers at the University of Hong Kong, 47 percent of respondents identified themselves as “proud” citizens of China. But things went downhill from there. In 2012, the Hong Kong government tried to introduce “patriotic education” in elementary and middle schools, but the proposed curriculum ran into a storm of local opposition and had to be withdrawn. In 2014, the 79-day Umbrella Movement brought hundreds of thousands of citizens into the streets to protest Beijing’s refusal to allow direct elections for the chief executive. And as authoritarianism has intensified under Xi’s rule, events such as the 2015 kidnapping of five Hong Kong–based publishers to stand trial in the mainland further soured Hong Kong opinion. By this past June, only 27 percent of respondents to the tracking poll described themselves as “proud” to be citizens of China. This year’s demonstrations started as a protest against a proposed law that would have allowed Hong Kongers suspected of criminal wrongdoing to be extradited to the mainland but then developed into a broad-based expression of discontent over the lack of democratic accountability, police brutality, and, most fundamentally, what was perceived as a mainland assault on Hong Kong’s unique identity.
Still, Chinese leaders do not blame themselves for these shifts in public opinion. Rather, they believe that Western powers, especially the United States, have sought to drive a wedge between Hong Kong and the mainland. Statements made by U.S. politicians in support of the recent demonstrations only confirm Beijing’s belief that Washington seeks to inflame radical sentiments in Hong Kong. As Xi explained in his speech in September:
As extreme elements in Hong Kong turn more and more violent, Western forces, especially the United States, have been increasingly open in their involvement. Some extreme anti-China forces in the United States are trying to turn Hong Kong into the battleground for U.S.-Chinese rivalry…. They want to turn Hong Kong's high degree of autonomy into de facto independence, with the ultimate objective to contain China's rise and prevent the revival of the great Chinese nation.
Chinese leaders do not fear that a crackdown on Hong Kong would inspire Western antagonism. Rather, they take such antagonism as a preexisting reality—one that goes a long way toward explaining why the disorder in Hong Kong broke out in the first place. In Beijing’s eyes, Western hostility is rooted in the mere fact of China’s rise, and thus there is no use in tailoring China’s Hong Kong strategy to influence how Western powers would respond.
IT’S NOT ABOUT THE BENJAMINS
The view that Xi has not deployed troops because of Hong Kong’s economic importance to the mainland is also misguided, and relies on an outdated view of the balance of economic power. In 1997, Hong Kong’s GDP was equivalent to 18 percent of the mainland’s. Most of China’s foreign trade was conducted through Hong Kong, providing China with badly needed hard currencies. Chinese companies raised most of their capital on the Hong Kong stock exchange. Today, things are vastly different. In 2018, Hong Kong’s GDP was equal to only 2.7 percent of the mainland’s. Shenzhen alone has overtaken Hong Kong in terms of GDP. Less than 12 percent of China’s exports now flow through Hong Kong. The combined market value of China’s domestic stock exchanges in Shanghai and Shenzhen far surpasses that of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, and Chinese companies can also list in Frankfurt, London, New York, and elsewhere.
Although Hong Kong remains the largest offshore clearing center for renminbi, that role could easily be filled by London or Singapore, if Chinese leaders so desired.
Investment flowing into and out of China still tends to pass through financial holding vehicles set up in Hong Kong, in order to benefit from the region’s legal protections. But China’s new foreign investment law (which will take effect on January 1, 2020) and other recent policy changes mean that such investment will soon be able to bypass Hong Kong. And although Hong Kong remains the largest offshore clearing center for renminbi, that role could easily be filled by London or Singapore, if Chinese leaders so desired.
Wrecking Hong Kong’s economy by using military force to impose emergency rule would not be a good thing for China. But the negative effect on the mainland’s prosperity would not be strong enough to prevent Beijing from doing whatever it believes is necessary to maintain control over the territory.
CAN’T BUY ME LOVE?
As it waits out the current crisis, Beijing has already started tackling the economic problems that it believes are the source of much of the anger among Hong Kongers. Housing prices have tripled over the past decade; today, the median price of a house is more than 20 times the median gross annual household income. The median rent has increased by nearly 25 percent in the past six years. As many as 250,000 people are waiting for public housing. At the same time, income growth for many Hong Kong residents has fallen below the overall increase in cost of living.
any question so far 回答 在 Fei 緋櫻雪 Facebook 的最佳貼文
Σ┗(@ロ@;)┛ 國外的網站Q&A訪談出來了 (#゚Д゚)Σ(°Д°; (゚ロ ゚ノ)ノ
當初收到訊息就直接答應人家(結果都全英文整個下屎我惹...)
因為他們表示只要提供15張照,我就很快速地隨便抓了幾張,攝影可能沒有全部放上,因為攝影真的很多位,然後我又水母腦,所以就以照片的攝影為主。
由於小女英文不是很好,所以回答的部分,文法什麼的就隨他去吧(遮臉),回答得好辛苦XDD (謝謝幫我翻譯問題的親友們(́✺◞౪◟✺‵) )
CONNECTED COSPLAY STARS FOR 2016. Cosplayers to keep your eyes on this year. From TAIWAN....
Q & A
1.
Name: Fei (Fei yinf shiue)
Location: Taiwan
Occupation: Sales/Wedding Singer
Website: https://www.facebook.com/Fei.ying.shiue/
Credits: (Photographers ect.):
“R.D.N”,”旅人灰,自然流”,”GAY” ,”ZMAP”,”Hello Jack”,”Fred”” TAIKHUN”、”Quincy pig” ,”坂本龍影像社”,”ZMC”,” K Daddy”… Really very a lot of haha~
2. When and how did you get started in Cosplay?
When I was a kid, being a character was my dream. I first went to comic-con with my friends in 2010. There were so many cosplayer !!! That really inspired me.
3. What was your first Cosplay?
Is 「One Piece」─Boa‧Hancock
4. What was the most difficult character?
By far the most difficult character, I think is 「BLEACH」─Shihouin Yorouichi. Because she’s complexion depth than me. So I must use make up let my complexion close to her. I spend 3 hours do my body's make up.
5. What characters are you planning for the future and type of character are you drawn to?
I always like brave and fierce, Sexy, wiser women. Maybe she have a little cute. For example "Black Widow", "Wonderwomen", "ELSA"...
In the future I want to challenge characters types like X-MEN's "Mystique". Because she’s makeup very difficult to me. So this year I want to challenge cosplay her!
6. What is your process when starting from the begining with a new cosplay?
First I will understand this character's personality, she will do what expression, and watch this anime/comic/ moive many times. At home I will practice the character's expression, action.
7. Are there any helpful hints in sewing, costume design or any other aspects of your cosplay that you discovered in doing your creations?
For the costume design I don't have any skill (Hey?!), I always let my friends do my costume. I help they makeup (haha), sometime I will do props for my character. (Like "ONE-PIECE"─ Portgus•D•Ace, in addition to hats and shoes, accessories are all the props made by myself.
8. Do you have a preferred brand of make up in your cosplay? And if so why?
Shu uemura and KIKO.
“Shu uemura” very suitable for Asian skin is also very durable,So I use foundation series. “KIKO” I use their all eye make-up series and lipstick, KIKO’s makeup have many colors and cosplay need a lot of color's makeup too.
9. What are you listening to?
Pop music and Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
Pop music like Taylor Swift , Demi Lovato, Christina Aguilera, Shakira…
.
10. Favorite Movies?
All marvel’s hero movie and Disney’s FROZEN.
11. Favorite Animes?
ONE-PIECE , GHOST IN THE SHELL , Fairy Tail and Macross FRONTIER… All my favorite.
12. Favorite TV Shows?
Saturday night live.
13. Is there a scene from a anime, cartoon, movie or tv show that left a big impression on you and what was it?
In「ONE-PIECE」have many Classic scenes, like Ace dead, vivi back her home... really have many Classic scenes. And in 「FROZEN」have 「An act of true love will thaw a frozen heart.」all touched me.
14.
Books?
「LESSONS from MOVIES」
Games?
「KING OF FIGHTERS 」
Beverage?
Ice cream black tea
Fast Food/ Junk Food of choice?
French fries
Candy bar?
POCKY(Strawberry)
Favorite Breakfast cereal?
Kellogg's Corn Flakes
15. Is there something not going on in the cosplay world that you would want to see or is there something you would want to change?
「Don't forget original goal, forever.」
16. What was your favorite toy growing up?
Not any special like . (bashful)
17. Who is your biggest character crush and why?
「Fairy Tail」─ Erza Scarlet.
She very kind,strong,wise,brave and fierce,and cute. I hope someday I can became like her.
18. If you had to be chained with a character for one year, what would be the character and what would you do?
Captain America. Hmm… Is secret. (hahahaha)
19. You can have dinner with your favorite character. And at this dinner you may ask one question. Who would be the character and what would be your one question?
Captain America.
I will ask him:「What kind of woman is your ideal type?」. (bashful)
20. What's number 1 on your bucket list? (Something you want to do before you leave the planet).
Actually...I have no ideal…Right now I just wanna do my cosplay . haha…
21. What advice would you give to people getting started in Cosplay?
「Don't forget original goal, forever. Do anything to be a serious effort.」
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