there is No difference.
I've never heard of a Chinese geisha. It's a Japanese word, and traditionally a Japanese profession.
their use of kanji
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.
Japanese and Chinese writings are different, but in some cases use the same characters.Japanese uses different writing systems:Hirigana - Used for native Japanese wordsKatakana - Mainly used when writing foreign wordsKanji - These are characters that were borrowed from the Chinese WritingRomaji - This is used when writing Japanese characters with the Latin AlphabetChinese uses characters that they call Hanzi.Hanzi is called by different names in other countries. But in Japanese it is called Kanji.Kanji are the Chinese characters that the Japanese use along with their other writing systems (Hirigana & Katakana) . Though in Japanese one character of Kanji and represent many syllables.
Latin and German are western languages, so they use letters just like how we write English. Japanese, Chinese and Arabic are eastern languages, so instead of using letters, they use characters that consists of strokes.
the china alphabet is Chinese: the Egypt alphabet is Egyptian
chinese are white and japanese are short
Differene of formal,informal and non-formal education
I've never heard of a Chinese geisha. It's a Japanese word, and traditionally a Japanese profession.
Kanji is a symbolic type alphabet used by the Japanese to write. It is derived from the Chinese written symbols and has many similarities with Chinese. Each symbol has a meaning or whole word associated with it, as opposed to the English alphabet where we only have individual letters that don't mean anything on their own. The Japanese have 4 writing systems: 1. Hiragana (for native Japanese words) 2. Katakana (for foreign/imported words and to emphasise a word) 3. Kanji (symbolic alphabet) 4. Romaji (This is essentially the English alphabet that they include in some of their day-to-day life, mostly numbers) Kanji contains up to 40,000 different symbols, but most Japanese know between 1,000-4,000.
look is a gread
"Teriyaki" is a Japanese word, and in approximation, would equate to 照燒 (based on cultural/language influences between Chinese and Japanese)
There is not a difference between bacteriod and bacterium. Both are bacteria.
THE WORD and THE DRAMA
cause they both have powerpoint eyes.
The yin and yang symbol is Chinese in origin, representing the concept of dualism in ancient Chinese philosophy. It symbolizes balance and harmony between opposing forces.
Military situation and Approach of the Imperial Japanese Army are some crucial differences between Chinese and Japanese historiography of the Nanking Massacre.