Preferably, a combination of Western culture and Chinese culture.
Koreans are asians and most asians use chopsticks to eat their food.
Traditionally, Chinese eat with chopsticks. They are nicer chopsticks than the rough square ones that you break apart from the American take out places. They are made from various materials, including wood and metal. They are often painted with small scenes at the top. However, in more modern times, you will also sometimes find Chinese that eat with western silverware as well.
Japanese people do NOT eat chopsticks. They eat with chopsticks. As western people eat their food with a knife, fork and spoon, many Asian cultures use chopsticks in place of the western cutlery. This requires the food to be prepared in 'byte' sized portions by the kitchen.
It is based on the moon instead of the sun.
Indonesians do not use chopsticks (unless they are in a Chinese restaurant). They traditionally use a spoon and a fork in most of Indonesia, one in each hand, though in some parts of the nation it is traditional to use one's hands.
i belive that instead of dressing in white they dress in red because that is the lucky colour for china
Try Amazon or eBay. You can also download software that will allow you to calculate using Chinese characters.
More often than not, chopsticks. Although western cultlery is sometimes used
Western people typically refer to the Chinese language as "Mandarin" or simply "Chinese."
Chinese do not have three birthdays. What might be confusing to some is that many of the Chinese will celebrate their lunar calendar birthday instead of their western calendar birthday. Some may even celebrate both. The lunar calendar is based on the moon and it's cycle so the date is different each year in correspondence with the western calendar.
Unlike Western languages like French, German, and English, Chinese does not have an alphabet. Written Chinese doesn't have letters that spell out words. Instead, it has characters that represent the different words of the language. The character for "open" is 開. In Simplified Chinese this is written 开.