Three things I know about Adobe Premiere and video editing.
1. All video editors have the focus on taking a clip or multiple clips, and cuttings things out or moving around to make a specific video, movie, music video etc.
2. More simplified video editors are linear (such as Windows Movie Maker) where there's only one path for the video so no overlay, a good use of music and sound effects is a lot harder. While the advanced Video editors (Adobe Premiere, Sony Vegas, Power Director etc) are non linear meaning you can place videos playing onto videos playing and you can have multiple layers of sound and video.
3. Editors have effects and transitions. Some effects include Chroma Key (taking the colour out of a background to an image or video), text, making sound louder or quieter, video overlays above videos (so you can place an explosion video clip over a building video clip to give the effect it's exploding), morphs to video clips like a ripple effect can be done etc. Examples of transitions include fading out and into black or white, flipping the videos like pages of a book, and a star transition (best to use ironically when making fun of cheesy music videos etc)
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