for the end part, i recommend clicking the plus on the right side of the screen, then choose a fully white image, then zoom it in, click on it and click on animations, click out and then select fade out! confused? + On the right side>white image>click on it>zoom in>animations>out>fade out :3
fr im a mobile editor and i actually try but like some of the mobile editors add text, random effects, make their edits and avatars shinys and call it a professional edit
Wow your velocity is good, i recommend this tutorial but you can do this instead 1 Split your clip you want to velocity start then change your speed to 0.3 or 0.1 then click smooth slow motion and press better quality (wait for the process apply) then export it. 2 once you export it, don't click done yet, just press cancel then go back 3 add your clip that you exported 4 then split the slow speed 5 then add beat. 6 once you add beat, go to your slow speed, split the beat 2, then change the speed to 5.0 (then split the slow speed and split to beat 3 then change the speed to 5.0) (do the same) Little Warning: If you don't do it you can do curve to do your velocity. Hope this Helped!
Are we gonna ignore the fact that The First Battle of Changsha (17 September 1939 - 6 October 1939; Chinese: 第一次長沙會戰) was the first of four attempts by Japan to take the city of Changsha, Hunan, during the second Sino-Japanese War. Coming two weeks after Germany's invasion of Poland on September 1, it was the first major battle of the war to fall within the time frame of what is widely considered World War II. The war had reached a stalemate after two years of fighting. Professor Fu Sinian noted in July 1939 that while the Chinese army had become stronger, the Japanese army had weakened. On 15 August, the 11th Army came up with the general plans for a campaign south of the Yangtze, ranging 250 kilometers (160 mi) from the Xiang River (Xiangjiang) to the Gan River. In early September, Japanese General Toshizō Nishio of the "Japanese Expeditionary Forces to China" and Lieutenant-General Seishirō Itagaki set out to capture Changsha, the provincial capital of Hunan. The Japanese 101st and 106th Divisions were deployed on the western bank of the Gan River in northern Jiangxi, and the 6th, 3rd, 13th, and 33rd Divisions marched southward from southern Hubei to northern Hunan. Two of the primary motivating factors for the Japanese in launching the attack were the signing of a non-aggression pact by their German ally with their Soviet enemy, and their defeat by Soviet forces at Nomonhan. A large attack on the Chinese would therefore restore morale.[6] In addition, Germany's invasion of Poland starting on 1 September 1939 gave the Japanese further motivation to crush China's will to fight in order to pave the way for the establishment of Wang Jingwei's puppet government in Central China. Altogether, it became obvious that the 100,000 strong Japanese force was to converge on Changsha. The Chinese strategy was to counter the enemy column in northern Jiangxi and then encircle the line on the path southward. On the night of 14 September 1939, Lieutenant General Ryotaro Nakai's 106th Division drove westward from north of Fengxin, Jiangxi, against Wan Baobang's 184th Division of the Chinese 60th Corps. After fierce fighting, the defending forces abandoned Gao'an.[4] The bulk of Japanese forces then moved northwest to assault Shangfu (上富), Ganfang (甘坊), and Xiushui (秀水).[4] In coordination with Nakai, Lieutenant General Jutaro Amakasu's 33rd Division assaulted Guan Linzheng's 15th Army Group from the south.[7] Having recently captured important strategic locations in Jiangxi Province, Japanese troops began their attacks on Changsha in earnest on 17 September. The Japanese 101st Division (Lieutenant General Masatoshi Saito) and 106th Division started marching westward towards Changsha in neighboring Hunan Province. Meanwhile, the 3rd Division (Lieutenant General Shinichi Fujita), 6th Division (Lieutenant General Shiro Inaba), 13th Division (General Shizuichi Tanaka), and 33rd Division invaded northern Hunan Province to put additional pressure on Changsha. However, the Japanese stretched too far out westward and were counter-attacked by Chinese forces from the south and the north, forcing them to retreat eastward. On 19 September, Japanese forces proceeded to attack Chinese defensive positions[8] along the Xinqiang River with poison gas on a wide scale.[9] Japan had not signed the Geneva Protocol (1925). After having recovered Cunqianjie on 19 September, Wang Yaowu's 74th Corps (51D, 57D, & 58D) and Song Ketang's 32nd Corps (139D & 141D) retook Gao'an in a counterattack on 22 September On 23 September Japanese forces drove the Chinese out of the Xinqiang river area, and the 6th and 13th Divisions crossed the river under a cover of heavy artillery, advancing further south along the Miluo River. East of Changsha, naval vessels landed the Shanghai Special Naval Landing Forces and portions of the 3rd Division, surrounding Changsha on three sides.[7] Heavy fighting continued afterwards and the Chinese retreated southward as distraction for the Japanese while supporting battalions arrived on the east and the west for an encirclement maneuver. The Chinese defenders had decided beforehand on flexible, guerilla-style tactics to wear down Japanese manpower and supplies through ambushes and harassing maneuvers.[10] Per General Chen Cheng's orders, the objective was to “to lure the enemy into the vicinity of Changsha for a decisive battle."[11] By 29 September, vanguard troops of the Japanese 6th Division had reached the outskirts of Changsha. However, a night attack the next day resulted in the Japanese advance finding themselves surrounded by “60,000 screaming Chinese on their front, rear and both flanks,” as an American military observer reported.[12] Due to the heavy casualties they had incurred, estimated at over 50,000 with a significant portion being fatalities, as well as the dangerous possibility of their overstretched supply lines being completely severed by encirclement, the Japanese forces were forced to withdraw across the Laodao River. Acting group army commander Guan Linzheng issued orders at once for 52nd and 73rd Corps to pursue the Japanese to Miluo River. General Xue Yue ordered a general counterattack on 3 October in pursuit of the Japanese who were south of Chongyang and Yueyang.[7] On 5 October, Chinese troops shot down a Japanese aircraft with orders from General Yasuji Okamura to call off the Changsha offensive, and the nearby Chinese 23rd Division attacked a Japanese Navy port at Yingtian (now Miluo), damaging several vessels. By 6 October, Japanese forces at Changsha were decimated and retreating. Two days later, the remnants fled northward over the Miluo River while the Chinese 195th Division of the 52nd Corps pursued them across the Xinqiang River to recapture their former forward positions. At night, the Chinese launched raids into Xitang and Yaolin.[7] By 10 October, Chinese forces had completely regained their former territories in northern Hunan Province, southern Hubei Province and northern Jiangxi Province.[7] Conclusion edit Changsha was the first major city to successfully repel Japanese advances. Retaining the city allowed the Nationalist Chinese forces to prevent the Japanese from consolidating their territories in Southern China. The commander of the city's defense, General Xue Yue, was a graduate of the Republic of China Military Academy and a Chiang Kai-shek loyalist. Date September 14 - October 13, 1939 (4 weeks and 1 day)[1] or September 17 - October 6, 1939 (2 weeks and 5 days) Location Changsha and proximity, China Result Chinese victory Belligerents Republic of China Empire of Japan Commanders and leaders Republic of China (1912-1949) Xue Yue Republic of China (1912-1949) Chen Cheng Republic of China (1912-1949) Guan Linzheng Republic of China (1912-1949) Yang Sen[2] Empire of Japan Yasuji Okamura Empire of Japan Masatoshi Saito Empire of Japan Ryotaro Nakai Empire of Japan Shinichi Fujita Empire of Japan Shiro Inaba Empire of Japan Shizuichi Tanaka Empire of Japan Shigetaro Amakasu Units involved Republic of China Army Military Region 9 Imperial Japanese Army 101st Division 106th Division Strength ~240,000 troops in 5 Army Groups, 1 Army, and 7 Corps divided between 30 Divisions in total.[3] ~120,000 troops in the 11th Army split between 6 Divisions 12 naval ships 100+ aircraft 100+ motor boats[4] Casualties and losses ~40,000 50,000 killed, wounded and missing?🤨
3:32 for ghost zooms an easier way is (NO EXPORTING NEEDED) Get the clip you want the ghost zooms on Duplicate the clip and overlay it and match it up with the other regular clip Click on the overlay and add key frames at the start and end of ur overlayed clip Go to the end keyframe and don’t delete it but zoom into the screen a little bit not too much OPTIONAL: After you do all of that Go to graphs on the overlayed clip and click the first one u see Go to opacity on the overlayed clip and turn it to 0 or whatever you like! HOPE THIS HELPS
zoe's in her capcut era chat 💖
HI BAILEY
hiiiiii
Hi❤
heyy gurl
hi baileyy
for the end part, i recommend clicking the plus on the right side of the screen, then choose a fully white image, then zoom it in, click on it and click on animations, click out and then select fade out!
confused? + On the right side>white image>click on it>zoom in>animations>out>fade out :3
Omg ZOEE your edits on capcut are insane 😍💗(tutorial needed!!)
Fr ❤
YES WE NEED A TUT I HAVE CAPCUT AND IDK HOW TOO MAKE A VID!!!!
Fr
Fr
lol
i hate ppl stealing ur hardwork 😭
Ikrrr sameeeee😢
unless it's a trend that's fine but not then nah
@@quinnzombie_animation true
@@quinnzombie_animation yea
They put templates up there for a reason
OKAY but like, how LONG did this TAKE you? Cuz WOW. 😮✨
I have been seeing u everywhere
Samee
I keep on seeing u loads
Girl u are everywhere
omg even on mobile you're so good!
she just used presets..
uh.
"presets"…?
@@Cotamonopresets what are presets?
@@Cotamono templates? bcz she showed us the editing i don't think she used templates.
@@raccoongawd They mean the already made effects | Like the flash etc
Hii zoe, I love your videos so much ⭐️ your edits deserved more 😢
GURL I HAVE THE SAME PFP STYLE AS U❤❤
LAVVVVVVVVV I LOVE UR VIDSSSSS!
Thanks!
HOW DID SHE NOT SEE THIS MAKE THIS FAMOUS OMGGG
@@ykxcamthank you but if she doesn’t see this it’s ok! Just supporting her and her channel!🤍
thats pretty good for capcut, considering most mobile people make their avatars glowing and call it glossy shaders.
fr
fr im a mobile editor and i actually try but like some of the mobile editors add text, random effects, make their edits and avatars shinys and call it a professional edit
Fr im both laptop editor and mobile editor
fr smart sharpen and glow 😭
Zoe making edits without shaders feels so weird 😭😭😭
Stopping kids from saying first or 30 likes lemme fix that
Why are you everywhere.
FRR
@@DefinitelyNotHaya am I 😭❤️?
frrrr
1:47 “camera spin rotation thingy” such inspiring words❤
lol real
I love Zoe’s undercover videos ❤❤
YASS THE QUEEN POSTED
Ur the best zoe you’ve even inspired me to make my own channel! you’re the best ❤
before 4ndzie
wsg I'm a fan
OMELETTE HII HAYDEN!!!
@@DarkkHayden 7h
Oop
HEY ZOE LOVE THIS CHANNLEL SUCH GOOD EDITING❤!
0:50 the avatar was sooo cute
ZOE IN HER CAPCUT ERA AND IM HERE FOR IT 🥰💅❤
HELP YOUR CAPCUT EDITS ARE SO GOOD MINE ARE TRASHH😭
Awwh
OMGG UR SO GOOD AT EDITINGG
She uses capcut Pro. 😅
@@NotSubahRobloxthat doesn’t matter..
Not trynna be rude js saying
Zoes editz are to good ❤
wait you actually ate i could never do that 😭 ♥
Wow your velocity is good, i recommend this tutorial but you can do this instead
1 Split your clip you want to velocity start then
change your speed to 0.3 or 0.1
then click smooth slow motion and press better quality (wait for the process apply)
then export it.
2 once you export it, don't click done yet, just press cancel then go back
3 add your clip that you exported
4 then split the slow speed
5 then add beat.
6 once you add beat, go to your slow speed, split the beat 2, then change the speed to 5.0 (then split the slow speed and split to beat 3 then change the speed to 5.0)
(do the same)
Little Warning: If you don't do it you can do curve to do your velocity.
Hope this Helped!
Also the panning tho-
YOUR FIT IS SUPER CUTE❤
WAKE UP THE QUEEN HAS POSTED!
Under two hours? ❤❤And girl- u too good on capcut, im so bad at it!
Zoeee I Love you
Ngl zoe's edits are so slay like nawwwww!
6:34 what’s the emote called?
Idk
@@vesi2coolwowww so helpful.
HANNAH IM A BIG FANNN
ikr😞
Caves in
omg zoe ur edits are litreally 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 i love em 💖💖
4:16 How did she make that in capcut it would take me a year to even do something like that 😔
IDK 😭
Its cus she has pro bfr mate😔☠️☠️
@@girlfromebay girl Ik I’m just saying even if I did have pro I still wouldn’t be able to make something like that mate 😔
@@Mochaa54 yh she has talent ig
IVE BEEN WAITING FOR THIS
u had luck
7:18 no copyright
Because she distorted it if she didn’t then she will get copyrighted
YAY ANOTHER UNDERCOVER! Im sick and just woke up and you just made my day ❤
Are we gonna ignore the fact that The First Battle of Changsha (17 September 1939 - 6 October 1939; Chinese: 第一次長沙會戰) was the first of four attempts by Japan to take the city of Changsha, Hunan, during the second Sino-Japanese War. Coming two weeks after Germany's invasion of Poland on September 1, it was the first major battle of the war to fall within the time frame of what is widely considered World War II. The war had reached a stalemate after two years of fighting. Professor Fu Sinian noted in July 1939 that while the Chinese army had become stronger, the Japanese army had weakened.
On 15 August, the 11th Army came up with the general plans for a campaign south of the Yangtze, ranging 250 kilometers (160 mi) from the Xiang River (Xiangjiang) to the Gan River. In early September, Japanese General Toshizō Nishio of the "Japanese Expeditionary Forces to China" and Lieutenant-General Seishirō Itagaki set out to capture Changsha, the provincial capital of Hunan. The Japanese 101st and 106th Divisions were deployed on the western bank of the Gan River in northern Jiangxi, and the 6th, 3rd, 13th, and 33rd Divisions marched southward from southern Hubei to northern Hunan.
Two of the primary motivating factors for the Japanese in launching the attack were the signing of a non-aggression pact by their German ally with their Soviet enemy, and their defeat by Soviet forces at Nomonhan. A large attack on the Chinese would therefore restore morale.[6] In addition, Germany's invasion of Poland starting on 1 September 1939 gave the Japanese further motivation to crush China's will to fight in order to pave the way for the establishment of Wang Jingwei's puppet government in Central China.
Altogether, it became obvious that the 100,000 strong Japanese force was to converge on Changsha. The Chinese strategy was to counter the enemy column in northern Jiangxi and then encircle the line on the path southward. On the night of 14 September 1939, Lieutenant General Ryotaro Nakai's 106th Division drove westward from north of Fengxin, Jiangxi, against Wan Baobang's 184th Division of the Chinese 60th Corps. After fierce fighting, the defending forces abandoned Gao'an.[4] The bulk of Japanese forces then moved northwest to assault Shangfu (上富), Ganfang (甘坊), and Xiushui (秀水).[4] In coordination with Nakai, Lieutenant General Jutaro Amakasu's 33rd Division assaulted Guan Linzheng's 15th Army Group from the south.[7]
Having recently captured important strategic locations in Jiangxi Province, Japanese troops began their attacks on Changsha in earnest on 17 September. The Japanese 101st Division (Lieutenant General Masatoshi Saito) and 106th Division started marching westward towards Changsha in neighboring Hunan Province. Meanwhile, the 3rd Division (Lieutenant General Shinichi Fujita), 6th Division (Lieutenant General Shiro Inaba), 13th Division (General Shizuichi Tanaka), and 33rd Division invaded northern Hunan Province to put additional pressure on Changsha. However, the Japanese stretched too far out westward and were counter-attacked by Chinese forces from the south and the north, forcing them to retreat eastward.
On 19 September, Japanese forces proceeded to attack Chinese defensive positions[8] along the Xinqiang River with poison gas on a wide scale.[9] Japan had not signed the Geneva Protocol (1925).
After having recovered Cunqianjie on 19 September, Wang Yaowu's 74th Corps (51D, 57D, & 58D) and Song Ketang's 32nd Corps (139D & 141D) retook Gao'an in a counterattack on 22 September On 23 September Japanese forces drove the Chinese out of the Xinqiang river area, and the 6th and 13th Divisions crossed the river under a cover of heavy artillery, advancing further south along the Miluo River. East of Changsha, naval vessels landed the Shanghai Special Naval Landing Forces and portions of the 3rd Division, surrounding Changsha on three sides.[7]
Heavy fighting continued afterwards and the Chinese retreated southward as distraction for the Japanese while supporting battalions arrived on the east and the west for an encirclement maneuver.
The Chinese defenders had decided beforehand on flexible, guerilla-style tactics to wear down Japanese manpower and supplies through ambushes and harassing maneuvers.[10] Per General Chen Cheng's orders, the objective was to “to lure the enemy into the vicinity of Changsha for a decisive battle."[11]
By 29 September, vanguard troops of the Japanese 6th Division had reached the outskirts of Changsha. However, a night attack the next day resulted in the Japanese advance finding themselves surrounded by “60,000 screaming Chinese on their front, rear and both flanks,” as an American military observer reported.[12]
Due to the heavy casualties they had incurred, estimated at over 50,000 with a significant portion being fatalities, as well as the dangerous possibility of their overstretched supply lines being completely severed by encirclement, the Japanese forces were forced to withdraw across the Laodao River. Acting group army commander Guan Linzheng issued orders at once for 52nd and 73rd Corps to pursue the Japanese to Miluo River. General Xue Yue ordered a general counterattack on 3 October in pursuit of the Japanese who were south of Chongyang and Yueyang.[7]
On 5 October, Chinese troops shot down a Japanese aircraft with orders from General Yasuji Okamura to call off the Changsha offensive, and the nearby Chinese 23rd Division attacked a Japanese Navy port at Yingtian (now Miluo), damaging several vessels. By 6 October, Japanese forces at Changsha were decimated and retreating. Two days later, the remnants fled northward over the Miluo River while the Chinese 195th Division of the 52nd Corps pursued them across the Xinqiang River to recapture their former forward positions. At night, the Chinese launched raids into Xitang and Yaolin.[7]
By 10 October, Chinese forces had completely regained their former territories in northern Hunan Province, southern Hubei Province and northern Jiangxi Province.[7]
Conclusion
edit
Changsha was the first major city to successfully repel Japanese advances. Retaining the city allowed the Nationalist Chinese forces to prevent the Japanese from consolidating their territories in Southern China. The commander of the city's defense, General Xue Yue, was a graduate of the Republic of China Military Academy and a Chiang Kai-shek loyalist. Date September 14 - October 13, 1939
(4 weeks and 1 day)[1]
or September 17 - October 6, 1939
(2 weeks and 5 days) Location
Changsha and proximity, China
Result Chinese victory
Belligerents
Republic of China
Empire of Japan
Commanders and leaders
Republic of China (1912-1949) Xue Yue
Republic of China (1912-1949) Chen Cheng
Republic of China (1912-1949) Guan Linzheng
Republic of China (1912-1949) Yang Sen[2]
Empire of Japan Yasuji Okamura
Empire of Japan Masatoshi Saito
Empire of Japan Ryotaro Nakai
Empire of Japan Shinichi Fujita
Empire of Japan Shiro Inaba
Empire of Japan Shizuichi Tanaka
Empire of Japan Shigetaro Amakasu
Units involved
Republic of China Army
Military Region 9
Imperial Japanese Army
101st Division
106th Division
Strength
~240,000 troops in 5 Army Groups, 1 Army, and 7 Corps divided between 30 Divisions in total.[3]
~120,000 troops in the 11th Army split between 6 Divisions
12 naval ships
100+ aircraft
100+ motor boats[4]
Casualties and losses
~40,000
50,000 killed, wounded and missing?🤨
Wth
loll
Skibbidi
IVE BEEN WAITING SO LONG FOR THISSS
1:07 what game?
Ttd3 I think
TTD3 by Emotes.CO☑️
ttd3 !
@@xx.coraaa thx!
@@belladti..l thx!
omg ur sooo good at editing :D
Hiii what’s the emote called?
Yess finally a post!
Hi 13 mins ago
1:42 name of the dance?
I DUNNO
@@PoppyLuo-m4gOMG SO HELPFUL… (not)
@@lahvraee i KNOWWW :0
It's smooth winner @
@@PoppyLuo-m4gthen don’t comment duhh
Zoe in her slay era💖
601 views in 29 mins Zoe fell off
957 views in 42 mins Zoe fell off
You fell off
lol
actually stfu these comments are annoying as hell
Shut up
Nice vid! New sub
THANKS FOR 93 SUBSCRIBERS❤😮😊❤❤🎉
You could just post a vid about it or something
Why are you saying it here?
Say it somewhere else
idc
no one cares no offence btw..
OMD, U DID WAYY BETTER THAN ME AND IM REALLY USED TO CC! YOURE TOO GOOD ZOE-
You sometimes inspire me
hey zoe! lov euuu
You edit better than me
zoe making edits is cool how are you so pro!!!
We need more undercover videos I love them! :3
Samee
Your voice is so pretty💗
wdym
ZOE NEVER FAILS TO ENTERTAIN US ❤❤❤
WSP AND THIS ATE AND LEFT NO CRUMBS ❤❤🎉
OMG YOU ARE IN AUSTRALIA SAMEEEEEE IM IN MEL
Amazing!
I LOVE IT SM, I WISH I COULD HAVE YOUR SKILLS
thx man
ATEEEEEE
your edits are so good
I LOV THESE SERIES SOO MUCHHHHH PLS MAKE MORE OF THEMM LYY
1:19 NOT ZOE HIDING HER LIGHTING CODES-
(me watching zoe struggle to edit on cc like :👀🤭
fr
Your the best UA-camr ever keep the good work 💕💕 ☺️
THE QUEEN POSTED EYSS
You taught me so much 😭❤
I Zoe! I love ur edits and videos
WAKE UP THE QUEEN HAS POSTED
I NEED A FULL TUTORIAL VIDEO OF THESE EDITS
Wowwww amazing!
WE NEED MORE VIDS LIKE THIS
ok man i will do this
You know it’s a good day when Zoe posts!
ZOE I love your edits they are so good!
Always a good day when Zoe posts
YESSS ZOE POSTEDDD
3:32 for ghost zooms an easier way is
(NO EXPORTING NEEDED)
Get the clip you want the ghost zooms on
Duplicate the clip and overlay it and match it up with the other regular clip
Click on the overlay and add key frames at the start and end of ur overlayed clip
Go to the end keyframe and don’t delete it but zoom into the screen a little bit not too much
OPTIONAL:
After you do all of that
Go to graphs on the overlayed clip and click the first one u see
Go to opacity on the overlayed clip and turn it to 0 or whatever you like!
HOPE THIS HELPS
YAYSSSSSSS I LOVE YOU ZOE
LIKE ALWAYS ZOE SLAYS
This Helped ALOTT!!!!! ❤
I love your edits zoe! 💞💞
Omg Zoe I’ve been a subscriber ever since 10k! It was in my old account and I’m so happy on how far you’ve got through this channel!
Yessssss finally someone doing a undercover on CapCut MOBILE
FIRST TIME BEING EARLY ONGGGGG
girls better then me and my few years of capcut experience-
You slayed the undercover!!
You edit sooo well
Omg early❤❤
Every single video is so time worthy to watch!!
Hey zoe i love u ur so talented!!💗💖
EARLY IK THIS VID GON BE SICK❤❤
0:20 I knew i wasn’t the only one who named my fits emo😂
LES GOO ZOE!
We love zoeeeeee❤🎉
ur so good on mobile!:0
I love ur channel
WSP AND THIS ATE AND LEFT NO CRUMBS !!!!
EARLYYY!!!
This videos are so entertaining we need more!
YOUR SO GOOD OMGGGGG
I LOVE THIS WHAT
TUTORIALS NEEDEDDDDDDD
THE QUEEN POSTED
omggggg i love these
I love your videos your my favourite youtuber ever❤❤