"Mexican" is a nationality, just like "Japanese", "French" or "Iraqi".
However when people talk about the ethnic groups they are referring to of course, the indigenous population. Namely Mexicas.
No. While Hispanic is not actually a race, many people confuse race and ethnicity.
No, because hispanic is not a race, rather an ethnicity.
The Census Bureau does constantly reconsider the way it measures race and ethnicity for the U.S. Census.The 2010 U.S. Census changed the design to more clearly Hispanic ethnicity as an ethnic category, not a race. This sentence was added: "For this census, Hispanic origins are not races."Hispanic terms were modified from "Hispanic or Latino" to "Hispanic, Latino or Spanish origin".
Guatemalans are from Guatemala and are of the general Hispanic or Latino race.
54% white, 17.4% black, 9.4% Asian, 27.2% hispanic(of any race)
Race refers to physical characteristics such as skin color and facial features, while ethnicity refers to cultural factors like nationality, language, and traditions. For example, a person may be of Asian race but have a Hispanic ethnicity if they are from a Spanish-speaking country. Another example is a person of African race but with a British ethnicity if they were born and raised in the UK.
Depends on race of mother - hispanic is generally a mix of white european (spain) and native american - if more european blood then she is white - if she is white hispanic then the race of the child is white. The child is only hispanic if he/she was raised hispanic, if not, then child is white non-hispanic.
Barack Obama is not Hispanic. He is of mixed race, with a Kenyan father and a White American mother. While his mother is of white ethnicity, his father's ethnicity is Luo, which is a Bantu ethnic group in Kenya.
hispanic
Hispanic refers to an ethnicity that encompasses individuals from Spanish-speaking countries, primarily in Latin America and Spain. Within the Hispanic community, people can belong to various racial groups, including White, Indigenous, Black, Asian, or mixed race. Therefore, being Hispanic does not define a specific race; rather, it reflects a shared cultural and linguistic heritage.
An example of an ethnicity is Hispanic or Latino.
hispanic