It is subjective to say that Japanese sounds better than Chinese as preferences for language sound are personal and cultural. Both languages have unique sounds and characteristics that appeal to different people.
Korean is more similar to Japanese than to Chinese, as Korean and Japanese are both considered to be part of the same language family, while Chinese is a separate language family.
Both are similarly hard to learn. Compared to Chinese, Japanese is more difficult and complex! Once you know Chinese, it's easy to pick Japanese up as well! So in order to have a good command of Japanese, now i am learning ordinary Chinese characters!
Korea is more closely related to Chinese culture than Japanese culture. This is because Korea has a long history of cultural exchange and influence with China, including language, religion, and customs.
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.
'Rangiku' literally means 'The Royal Key' in Japanese.
idk but japanese food is very good better than chinese
It Doesn't. Everybody has their own personal tastes, Yours might be Japanese over Chinese.
This is a question of personal preference and there is no clear information on which one Americans prefer overall. Chinese food is consumed at a much higher rate than Japanese food in the United States, but it is likely that this comes from the fact that Chinese food is much less expensive than Japanese food and, therefore, much easier for people to afford to eat than any question of flavor preference.
That depends entirely on where and what you plan to do in your line of work. Japanese and Chinese are likely better options than Korean in general, but beyond that is entirely up to you.
chinese. japanese are actually the chinese sent to japan more than 2000 years back by emperor qin.
the chinese were treated worse than others. The malays and indians were treated slightly better as the Japanese wanted to earn the trust from them. The eurasians were also tortured as they helped to fight against the japanese.
Korean is more similar to Japanese than to Chinese, as Korean and Japanese are both considered to be part of the same language family, while Chinese is a separate language family.
Chinese and Japanese are completely UNRELATED languages. There is no similarity at all, other than the fact that the Japanese borrowed about 2000 Chinese characters. There are also some loanwords from Chinese.
Though Japanese are a little taller than Chinese averagely. But different Chinese from different parts of China are much different in stature. Most northerners are much taller than southerners of China and Japanese. And many Chinese can speak more standard English. Japanese used to bowing in greeting, but most Chinese used to shaking hands. Japanese like quiet; in contrast, Chinese is more extrovert to some extent.
Showed that the German built BATTLESHIPS that China had purchased were better than the CRUISERS that the Japanese were using against them. IJN shells weren't penetrating those Chinese battleships.
It really depends on what you are really referring to - Both Chinese and Japanese have 4-character proverbs/idioms.
Japanese people do not speak Chinese unless they have learned it in school or have lived in China. For the languages of Japan, click here.