an Asian Asian's homeland is Asia and liviog in Asia as his parents and grandparents or incestors belong from Asia.an Asian American's homeland is Asia but living in America as he himself or his ancestors migrated from Asia to America
Yeah, not to mention that Asian Americans usually have English first names (for example, John Lee, Thomas Seeaung, Jacob Jing...etc). Also, Asian-Americans usually don't have foreign accents because they are used to English being their active tounge.
Unless, they stuck close to their Asian ancestors and still spoke their language. There a Mexican-American kid in my school, I thought he was born in Mexico because he had an accent but he was born in America but he/his family speaks Spanish at home.
Asian Americans, usually don't speak their mother/native toungues anymore as their ancestors or parents did or do. Some Asians still do speak their languages, like the Filipino-Americans from Hawaii. A lot of them are Hawaiian and American born, even long generations into Hawaii or America meaning that their GREAT GREAT grandpa/grandma was an immigrant but they still speak Tagalog/Filipino or Illocano and such. Indian-Americans, (descended from India, not Native Americans) same concept. A lot still speak their parents native toungues but are born here, some don't. I got Indian-American classmates who speak Tamil, Hindi and Bengali or Punjabi at their homes but they don't have foreign accents because the are American born. Yes guys...Indians are Asian too. A lot of Japanese-Americans as far as I know, DON'T speak their Japanese toungues anymore. The Japanese-Americans who got persecuted and sent to internment camps in World War II didn't speak Japanese, I doubt most of them did.
I don't like the term "Asian" as a race/ethnicity really. Basically the Native Americans are "Asian-Americans" in reality, speaking to the fact that they came from Asia, from what is now Mongolia and Russia (Asian seciont of Russia).
They are differnet colours
the size and shape of their ears
No difference. They just come from different places.
Can you tell the difference between Vyvanse and Concerta in a drug test
how can you tell the difference between a tortoise and a turtle by shell in picture
Patti Duncan has written: 'Tell this silence' -- subject(s): American literature, Asian American authors, Asian American women, Asian American women in literature, Asian Americans in literature, History and criticism, Intellectual life, Politics and literature, Sex role in literature, Silence in literature, Women and literature, Women authors
by looking at the skin
Vending machines have laser scanners that can tell the difference between the bills.
you can tell the difference between right and wrong from the little voice inside your head
please tell me the difference between thickness
no but you can tell the difference by taste
No difference