Their differences are found to be more striking because although China supported restoring the old, Rome supported creating a new. China restored the old by enforcing authority to only one state instead of many. Rome created a new by passing a written code of laws, expanding, and establishing a republic.
all chinese people are ugly
Pogi pareho !
the chinese need it
None (maybe a little bit of Mandarin, but the similarities stop there). However the writing is derived from Chinese (which slowly evolved over time) and most if not all have a Chinese style pronunciation ("on-yomi") for kanji.
race?
all chinese people are ugly
because the language is not same.
no
There are absolutely NO similarities whatsoever, The differences are that Ancient chinese were obviously Far more advanced and devepoled, On the other hand Ancient muslims (Arabs) Couldn't even start a fire.
Both Chinese and English use onomatopoeia to describe sounds, but they differ in the specific sounds represented due to cultural and linguistic differences. Some similarities include using repeated consonants or vowels to mimic sounds like "buzz" or "clang." Chinese onomatopoeia tends to be more descriptive and can incorporate tones, while English onomatopoeia typically focuses on the sound itself.
Social and family lifestyle.
A Chinese box diagram, or Venn diagram, helps compare things side-by-side. When teaching languages, this is helpful so teachers and students can see both the similarities and the differences.
One of the most significant similarities is the parents' goal for their kids. Both Chinese and Japanese Americans want their kids to do their best and get not only straight A's but do well in other activities as well. There isn't much difference between the two.
Most Chinese music is much like music in America, except in Chinese, but that is only nowadays. It used to be lots of flutes and harps and more like what you would call new age music today.
Yes, knowing Chinese can help with learning Japanese due to similarities in characters and some vocabulary. However, the grammar, writing systems, and pronunciation are different between the two languages, so there will still be significant differences to learn.
Both Vietnamese and Chinese are tonal languages, meaning that the pitch of a word can change its meaning. However, Vietnamese is a Mon-Khmer language with an alphabet based on the Latin script, while Chinese is a Sino-Tibetan language with characters. Additionally, Vietnamese has a simpler grammar structure compared to the more complex grammar of Chinese.
Pogi pareho !