Hi ,

If you want to be the kind of woman who holds the attention of EVERY man in the room...

And have the kind of control over a man's feelings that he will do almost ANYTHING to please you..

You need to watch this video



It's a crazily simple, secret technique...

And I must warn you it has a 'dark side'...

But used correctly, this is going to get you INSANE results with men once you learn what goes on, deep inside his mind.

Even if he's allergic to commitment...

Even if he has a reputation for using women...

YOU are going to be the one woman that changed it all.

Just imagine being able to see deep inside a man's being, and having the power to make ANY MAN feel an obsessive compulsion to approach you and impress you.

It's like using his own mind against him ;)

My friend Marni Kinrys is quite unlike any woman I know.

By night she teaches men all over the world how to approach women.

And in that time she has learned some 'top secret' stuff men would usually never tell a woman.

Deep, dark secrets. Dirty laundry. Guys pouring out their hearts about what they want in the hope that Marni would help them.

And now she's ready to share it with you.

Guys are going to feel pretty betrayed about this, but I want you to know.

To even the field. To dominate. To face the world of dating men and know YOU hold all the cards.

Watch the video now, and prepare to be impressed.

I know I was.

Your friend,
Rudolph
 








 
lfill several formal criteria specified by the nomenclature codes, e.g. selection of at least one type specimen. These criteria are intended to ensure that the species name is clear and unambiguous, for example, the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature states that "Authors should exercise reasonable care and consideration in forming new names to ensure that they are chosen with their subsequent users in mind and that, as far as possible, they are appropriate, compact, euphonious, memorable, and do not cause offence." Species names are written in the 26 letters of the Latin alphabet, but many species names are based on words from other languages, and are Latinized. Once the manuscript has been accepted for publication, the new species name is officially created. Once a species name has been assigned and approved, it can generally not be changed except in the case of error. For example, a species of beetle (Anophthalmus hitl eri) was named by a German collector after Adolf Hitler in 1933 when he had recently become chancellor of Germany. It is not clear whether such a dedication would be considered acceptable or appropriate today, but the name remains in use. Species names have been chosen on many different bases. The most common is a naming for the species' external appearance, its origin, or the species name is a dedication to a certain person. Examples would include a bat species named for the two stripes on its back (Saccopteryx bilineata), a frog named for its Bolivian origin (Phyllomedusa boliviana), and an ant species dedicated to the actor Harrison Ford (Pheidole harrisonfordi). A scientific name in honor of a person or persons is known as a taxonomic eponym or eponymic; patronym and matronym are the gendered terms for this. A number of humorous species names also exist. Literary examples include the genus name Borogovia (an extinct dinosaur), which is named after the borogove, a mythical ch aracter from Lewis Carroll's poem "Jabberwocky". A second example, Macrocarpaea apparata (a tall plant) was named after the magical spell "to apparate" from the Harry Potter novels by J. K. Rowling, as it seemed to appear out of nowhere. In 1975, the British naturalist Peter Scott proposed the binomial name Nessiteras rhombopteryx ("Nes