Are Chinese and Vietnamese the same race?

Are Chinese and Vietnamese the same race?

The Vietnamese people (Vietnamese: người Việt) or Kinh people (Vietnamese: người Kinh) are a Southeast Asian ethnic group originally native to modern-day Northern Vietnam and Southern China….Vietnamese people.

Total population
Ukraine 10,000–50,000
Mainland China 36,205 (2010) /28,199 (2010)
Philippines 27,600
Norway 27,366 (2020)

Do Vietnamese make eye contact?

To convey respect and other traditional values, Vietnamese usually choose non-verbal gestures, such as gentle bows, friendly smiles, nods and by avoiding direct eye contact. Thus, avoiding eye-contact in talking to people who are not an equal or the same sex is deemed to be appropriate, polite behavior in Vietnam.

What do Vietnamese people think about China and Chinese people?

Vietnamese and Chinese can agree in almost everything in real life except for history, politics and some others. We tend to say that Vietnamese know China better than anyone (except for Chinese of course) and generalize very quickly. The tone, however has significantly been more sympathetic in recent years.

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Does the typical Vietnamese look like Chinese?

The typical northern Vietnamese look similar to southern Chinese, while many (but not all) southern Vietnamese look a lot like Cambodians, or mixed. She might look Chinese. But I think this family doesn’t look Chinese. This family even looks like Khmer, rather than Chinese, though they are Kinh (Viet), not Khmer.

How can you tell if a person is Vietnamese just by looking?

And Vietnamese in general cannot tell if a person is or is not Vietnamese just by the look, or at least is not recommended to do so, because sometimes that person only start looking like Vietnamese when he/she starts to speak in perfect Vietnamese with some regional accent.

Why are China and Vietnam lumped together?

Vietnamese court officials trained in China. They brought Confucianism south and inculcated the court and the country with the Chinese philosophy. For many international observers, this–and the subsequent Communism of both countries–is enough to warrant lumping the two countries together. This is a mistake.

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