Sino is another word for chinese, so sinocentric would be view biased to what's good for China.
Sino-Vietnamese vocabulary is a part of the Vietnamese language. So, yes. Vietnamese know a lot of 'Sino-Vietnamese' as 50-60% of Vietnamese consists of words of Chinese origin or Sino-Vietnamese. For example, the word 'at' is Tai in Vietnamese (from 在 'Zai' in Chinese), to come in Vietnamese is 'Lai' (same as in Chinese 来 'Lai'), country is Quoc in Vietnamese (from 國 Gwok in Cantonese), and the list could co on for hundreds and thousands of pages. Without Sino-Vietnamese vocabulary, Vietnamese wouldn't be a language - it would merely be a skeleton with flesh.
bat ganon hndi ko na iintinfihan kong sino ang iniibig ko
You're referring to the 1930's, WWII, correct? If so, it was General Chang Kai Shek.
Indo-European, by a wide margin. Sino-Tibetan is a fair contender, since there are so many Chinese, but it has few descendents.
J. Rizal
sino-jaoanese war becuz when the japs r losing the war.surrenduring is cowardice so they made suicide attacks like kamikze attacks banzai charges or just suicide
Some combat experience, so Japan could fight the next war (Russia in 1904).
In 1937, Japan declared war on China. Fighting continued until China officially declared war in 1941, and in doing so, also declared war on the WWII Axis. The war ended when Japan surrendered to the Allies in 1945.
alam niyo kung sino man ang sumasagot katanungan na narito please stop kasi kami humihingi kami ng sagot yung tmang sagot sayang ang pera na aming ibinabayad so please stop.
They were both a part of the Japanese attempt at expansion and the securing of colonies for raw materials. Japan saw its future in industialization and expansion but Japan being an island did have the resources to support this. So the Japanese sought to secure resources by invading. This brought them into conflict with first the Russians then the Chinese. the russo-Japanese war secured Korea and sino-Japanese war secured manchuria and various coastal provinces of china.
There's a lot of Christmas songs in Brazil. But they tend to create portuguese versions of international Christmas songs. Anyway, unlike what was said in the previous answer, they speak portuguese, not spanish, so they don't sing Feliz Navidad.