1. The Chinese military is a LAND based military; in the same category as Russia and Europe, since they both occupy the same continent (Eurasia). 2. Japan is a SEA based military; in the same category as Great Britain, since they both occupy Island Kingdoms.
I've never heard of a Chinese geisha. It's a Japanese word, and traditionally a Japanese profession.
Typically, one wouldn't find big differences between Chinese and Japanese Architecture. However, as you look closer, there are many unique factors which sets the two apart: - Japan uses the "tatami" which is not used in Chinese architecture to build their rooms - It has a slide door with decoration on it(white background) -Japaneses use much more wood than Chinese house -Japanese usually have a garden surrounded by their houses whereas in Chinese houses, the garden tends to be surrounding the house.
there is No difference.
their use of kanji
the chinese need it
Military situation and Approach of the Imperial Japanese Army are some crucial differences between Chinese and Japanese historiography of the Nanking Massacre.
often written in Classical Chinese.
One is fake and the other are extinct.
In the long run, Japanese tea and Chinese tea actually came from the same place, China. Over a long period of time the Japanese have improved there tea by growing their own. There are a few big differences between the two. The price, the quality, and the taste.
chinese are white and japanese are short
Chinese, Japanese, and Korean characters are all logographic writing systems, but they have distinct differences. Chinese characters are the oldest and most complex, with thousands of characters representing words or concepts. Japanese uses a mix of Chinese characters (kanji) along with two syllabaries (hiragana and katakana). Korean characters (Hangul) are phonetic and represent sounds rather than meanings, making them simpler and easier to learn.
Taoism, Buddhism Conficuonism, Legalism v.s. Shinto. They are completely different, almost opposites on some cases.
Social and family lifestyle.
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.
I've never heard of a Chinese geisha. It's a Japanese word, and traditionally a Japanese profession.
Typically, one wouldn't find big differences between Chinese and Japanese Architecture. However, as you look closer, there are many unique factors which sets the two apart: - Japan uses the "tatami" which is not used in Chinese architecture to build their rooms - It has a slide door with decoration on it(white background) -Japaneses use much more wood than Chinese house -Japanese usually have a garden surrounded by their houses whereas in Chinese houses, the garden tends to be surrounding the house.
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.