@elbagrau

Her english abiliy is on a "WOW !" level !

@flaviooliveira6999

This is the most encouraging video to learn Chinese that I ever saw. It makes a lot easier when you explain the philosophy behind each word and ideogram. Chinese made sense to me for the first time.

@sarisetiyani2563

Thank you very much Teacher, you are very kind person, thanks for sharing how to write CC, Love from Indonesia. You are best teacher ever

@lindacarazaeriksson1533

Thank you for sharing! I decided to learn Chinese 2010 before going to China for the first time. I learnt basics and most pinyin...so when I came back to Gรถteborg, Sweden, where I live I signed up for a basic course at  University. Most classmates were 2-nd and 3rd generation Chinese and had hard time trying to memorise characters. We learnt both simplified and traditional Chinese. I preferred the last one, since it's easy to relate to real images. Among my classmates was a Japanese girl. To my surprise I was doing better than her, even when Japanese had borrowed at least 60% of the Chineses words...(I got this information from our Chinese teacher). However I feel very proud  of my Chinese skills, still I can understand when some Chinese speak and recognize more or less 100 characters (I used to understand 500 characters).
I'd like to catch up Chinese in the near future and I will definitely contact you then!
Xie xie

@MaxAmerica.Freedom

This is the best channel to learn Chinese characters. Also, the teacher is very pretty who wears beautiful dresses. Thank you for the video.

@lindseylanesboro3576

This lady is lovely and clear in her teaching...very well thought out video lessons...thankyou๐ŸŽ‰

@peterkephart7955

You are an excellent teacher. I have just begun to study Mandarin and have consulted numerous channels. So far, I haven't found anyone who makes learning Mandarin as easy as you do.

@luxinfinity73

I studied Japanese in Japan when I was younger. I am Italian and when I first saw a French friend of mine studying Japanese, I immediately fell in love with the language. Most of my classmates were either Chinese or Korean so they lused to joke about me (in a friendly way) when it took me centuries to copy something from the blackboard or when I couldn't possibly understand the meaning of a character. Our teachers only spoke Japanese. Everything was new to me in Japan but eventually, I found a dictionary ordered by number of strokes and life got much easier. To learn ๆผขๅญ—, I bought a special notebook used by elementary school children to ensure my characters were well drawn and spaced. 
A few years ago, I came across Chinese fantasy historical drama (xianxia) and I have been binge watching them ever since. I read the English subtitles which are normally below or above the Chinese subtitles and I am always pleased when I can recognise the characters. I would love to learn Chinese and Korean but I have been mostly bed ridden for the past three years due to a seriously debilitating disease. I live in Cambodia and learned a few essential words in Khmer, however to me visual languages are way more impactful than sound based languages. For a Western person, for example, the sign used for not smoking does not need any words, everybody understands it and what about the skull drawn on poison labels? Symbols are very powerful and I was surprised to have instant feelings whenever I see and recognise characters. The Chinese language, Japanese and Korean are visually emotional languages while other languages are more musical. You can express an entire concept just by looking at one character while other languages need many words. I will follow your program also hoping you will explain the difference between Mandarin, Cantonese and... the third one ๐Ÿ˜‹. I also love Traditional Chinese Medicine, I received acupuncture treatment in Japan and whenever available, I use TCM. I am sure acupuncture can heal me but there is nobody available where I live. Unfortunately, unlike Thailand and Malaysia, Cambodia has been too Westernised and Traditional Chinese Medicine very hard to find. I hope the immortals are listening to my prayers and I invite them to help me heal! ๐Ÿ™๐Ÿ’–๐Ÿ˜œ๐Ÿค—๐Ÿ˜

@Robert-ow7sz

I appreciate and applaud the speaker for her excellent English ability and teaching of the ideographs. I will visit often. (My wife is Chinese from Guangzhou).

@eddted2876

Very good teacher ! She makes it more simple to understand Chinsse characters!!  โญ•๐Ÿ”ดโญ•๐Ÿ”ดโญ•

@r.t1576

I'm Chinese too, but I struggle to pick up characters because I grew up outside China. The biggest mistake I made was quitting Sunday school (where kids learn Chinese) because I felt embarrassed to be Chinese due to the racist bullying I received at school. As I grew older, I learned to be proud of my heritage.

@fahadkhan-co2xf

It's different and difficult to learn Chinese but I found a splendid teacher keep it up!

@ThreeMandarin

Very charming teacher, very clear, which makes very difficult Chinese characters more interesting and easier to learn.  Not only non-native Chinese speakers can learn, but also children who are Chinese native speakers, thank you very much for your efforts

@snowlotus562

้žๅธธๅฅฝ๏ผ very well thought out and helpful  program esp. for us overseas  chinese , asians and our like minded  westerner friends!ๅคš่ฌ! ๐Ÿ€„๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ’–

@benjaminfranklin9744

I have been trying to learn Chinese from other videos.
This by far the best one.

But SHE'S so BEAUTIFUL that iher beauty outshine her great teaching skills

@YouTubeCensorshipStinks

I'm not even learning Mandarin, but I will not deny the pure quality I am seeing in this video. Thank you for the effort you've put in and the lessons you share.

@terrydakingslay

As a Chinesse person too, I would love to have a series where i can re-learn chinese again and get the same good feeling when i learn a new word. I would also get a better understanding with the series. Keep up the good work!

@johnmcdonald323

Excellent teacher!! I love the way you teach Chinese ๐Ÿ˜Š!! Very easy to follow !! Thank you!!๐Ÿ˜Š

@xtceeee1

I love how she uses hand gesture to explain the melody of the word

@ู†ูŠุณุฑ96

An enjoyable and useful lesson on interpreting the shape and word. I ask you, our teacher, to continue with regular lessons as if we were in the classroom to learn the shape of the letter, uses, and the like, as you did in this lesson. .. Thank youโค