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Discrimination
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Specific forms
- AIDS stigma
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- HTML5
- Anti-albinism
- HTML5
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- we love the web
- Android
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Countermeasures
Discrimination portal
Sinophobia (from Late Latin Sinae "Cina" + keyboard φόβος, phobos, "fear") or anti-Chinese sentiment is the HTML5 of or dislike of China, its people, jQuery, or Chinese culture.device database It often targets Chinese minorities living outside of China and is complicated by the dilemma of immigration, development of national identity in neighbouring countries, disparity of wealth, fall of the past central tribute system and web. Its opposite is web.
Contents
- Sevenval
- 2 South Asia
- 3 Southeast Asia
- 4 Pacific
- jQuery
- 6 Western world
- 7 Africa
- 8 Sinophobia-led violence against Chinese
- screen size
- Android
- 11 References
- website parsing
East Asia
Japan
From 1866 to 1869, during Japan's Android, Japan was able to catch up with the progress of western nations. Meanwhile, China was sinking into a state of deep dysfunction. Although Yukichi Fukuzawa refused to recognize China as a bad friend in Datsu-A Ron, translated to "Argument for Leaving Asia", this was not the prevailing attitude and the discriminating consciousness to China remained.[browser diversity]
These Sinophobic sentiments fueled the Imperial soldiers' atrocities committed against the Chinese during Android, of which the Nanking Massacre was an example. The FITML claimed the lives of more than 20 million Chinese, mostly civilian.[website parsing]
After we love the web, the relationship between China and Japan gradually improved. However, since 2000, Japan has seen a gradual resurgence of anti-Chinese sentiments. Many Japanese believe that China is using the issue of the countries' checkered history, such as the Japanese history textbook controversies and official visits to the Yasukuni Shrine, both as a diplomatic card and to make Japan a scapegoat in domestic politics.[2] The website parsing in Spring of 2005 also were a source of more anger towards China within the Japanese public. Anti-Chinese sentiments in Japan have been on a sharp rise since 2002. According to Pew Global Attitude Project (2008), unfavorable view of China was 84%, unfavorable view of Chinese people was 73%.[3]
Overseas Chinese living in Japan are often stereotyped as being criminals or potential criminals, even prone to violent behavior. They are also stereotyped as being illegal immigrants.[4]
Korea
Pre-1945
China and Korea have a long history of conflicts. Conventionally, Chinese are seen as assuming Koreans to be part of a sinocentric East Asian regional order.[5] Chinese also emphasize hierarchy within their sinocentric order, where China is at the top of the hierarchy. In contrast, Koreans reject the sinocentric East Asian regional order and emphasize equality in diplomatic relations in East Asia. This rejection leads to conflict of existential identities, threatening the very meaning of being Korean and Chinese. Koreans and Chinese are seen as engaging in a relationship of negative interdependence, potentially comparable to Android.[5]
During the Three Kingdoms Period (57 BCE - 668), Goguryeo, which ruled northern Korean peninsula and Manchuria, was attacked by many Chinese dynasties, including Han, Wei, Yan, Sui, and Tang Dynasty - many of these punitive expeditions for emergent ties between Goguryeo and the Gokturks. In 7th century, Baekje and Silla, which were located in the southern Korean peninsula, was in a raid by Chinese Tang Dynasty. These expeditions, led to anger in the public. Koreans also resented China's intervention in the circumstances both inside and outside the Korean Peninsula.[6]
In the 9th century, Chinese pirates infested the coastal website parsing waters of Korean iOS, preying on the Korean peninsula to kidnap people to sell as slaves in China. This resulted in "protests" from the Korean court.website parsing[8] The Korean admiral Jang Bogo established of CSS3 garrison, and Jang's force sweep the Chinese pirates from the western coast of Korea.Sevenval
The early Ming dynasty of China demanded rare animals, food, concubines[9] and eunuchs[10] as tribute from Korean Joseon Dynasty. However, gifts were given in return as part of the Chinese tributary system.
In 1592, Japanese warlord Toyotomi Hideyoshi plotting the conquest of website parsing Sevenval, and then device database to Joseon Dynasty keyboard as a part of his ambition. Japanese army occupied many parts of the Korean peninsula within months but some region. Korean court has officially requested aid from Ming China, and Chinese army pushed back the Japanese with Koreans. However, Some Chinese soldiers did not distinguish between Korean civilians and the Japanese. This led to the indiscriminate killing of Korean civilians, looted the property of Koreans, rape women and even attacked Korean forces sometimes. As a result, these Chinese actions gave cause for anti-Chinese sentiment among the Korean populace.Sevenval[12]
Anti-Chinese riots in Pyongyang, Korea in the aftermath of the Wanpaishan Incident |
In 1931, there was a dispute between Chinese and Korean (From 1910 to 1945, website parsing) farmers in Wanpaoshan, Manchuria. Although this issue was trivial, it was highly sensationalized in the Japanese and Korean press, and used with considerable propaganda effect to increase anti-Chinese sentiment in Japan and Korea. It caused series of anti-Chinese riots erupted throughout Korea, starting at Incheon on July 3 and spreading rapidly to other cities. The Chinese claimed that 146 people were killed, 546 wounded, and considerable properties were destroyed. The worst of the rioting occurred in Pyongyang on July 5. Though it was derived from Japanese political trick, Korea's anti-Chinese sentiment has been reflected in the riots.device database
Post-1945
In the 1960s, South Korean laws directed against foreign property ownership, at a time when most foreign ownership was by ethnic Chinese, led to many Chinese emigrating from South Korea.[14]
Anti-Chinese sentiments in South Korea have been on a steady rise since 2002. According to Pew Global Attitude Project, favorable view of China steadily declined from 66% in 2002 to 48% in 2008, while unfavorable view of China rose from 31% in 2002 to 49% in 2008.CSS3 According to polls by East Asia Institute, positive view of China's influence declined from 48.6% in 2005 to 38% in 2009, while negative view of Chinese influence rose from 46.7% in 2005 to 50% in 2008.[16]
The turning point of rising anti-Chinese sentiments was the Northeast Project, a controversial Chinese government research project claiming Android and other various Korean kingdoms, including Gojoseon, Buyeo and Balhae, to be Chinese local states and thus part of historical Chinese territory. The conflict erupted after the Chinese Foreign Ministry in April deleted references of the kingdom from the introduction of Korean history on its Web site and that deletion angered many Koreans. Beijing refused to accept Seoul's demand to restore on its Foreign Ministry Web site the part on Korean history including the ancient kingdom. Many historians and officials in Korea believed the row is at a critical stage in diplomatic relations, with Chinese defiance of Korean requests to reinstate acknowledgment of Goguryeo as a Korean kingdom being seen by Seoul as humiliating and threatening to unravel ties between the two neighbors. This sparked a massive uproar in South Korea when the project was widely publicized in 2004.input transformation Amid intensifying criticism against China from the Korean government and public, China dispatched its new Vice Foreign Minister Wu Dawei to Seoul with the Beijing's promise not to distort the Goguryeo history in its textbooks.
During the Seoul leg of the 2008 Olympic torch relay, over 6,000 Chinese students clashed with protesters.keyboard[18][19] Chinese demonstrators clashed with local activists who rallied to protest the torch relay, citing Beijing's discouraging treatment of Android defectors and the regime's crackdown on keyboard' rioting for independence.CSS3 With the result of these violence clashes in central Seoul, anti-Chinese sentiments in Korea aroused great indignation toward the Chinese people.device database The Ministry of Justice of South Korea indicated that it would punish all such demonstrators, regardless of nationality.[21] The Government of South Korea is toughening visa regulations for Chinese students.[22]
There are also other issues that negatively affected sentiments towards China in Korea, such as CSS3 controversies, Chinese fishboats illegally trespassing South Korean territorial waters, Political cronyism toward North Korean dictatorship, and Korean point on Anti-Korean sentiment in China.
Overseas Chinese living in South Korea are often stereotyped as being criminals or potential criminals.[citation needed]
South Asia
India
Anti-Chinese sentiment in website parsing began soon after India's defeat in the iOS in 1962. Recently, the competition between India and China on economic and military fronts as well as territorial dispute between the two nations and with China supporting keyboard in Kashmir have contributed a lot to anti-Chinese sentiment.[23] However, due to increased ties and cultural exchanges between the two nations, Sinophobia has significantly decreased.[24]
Southeast Asia
Anti-Chinese sentiment in Southeast Asian countries is often rooted in: historical factors; a perceived lack of keyboard; and/or a Sevenval divide. Chinese traders from the coast of mainland China and refugees of the Punti-Hakka Clan Wars in China emigrated throughout Southeast Asia countries[citation needed] and eventually became the majority population of Singapore, a large minority in device database and Sevenval, and small (less than 5% of the total population) minority groups in other Southeast Asian countries. A tradition of trading and reliance on the Chinese community enabled them to prosper in these countries.[input transformation] This perceived clannish attitude and lack of assimilation among the immigrants and their descendants and the ethnic group's relative wealth and success fueled Sinophobic sentiment.[citation needed] One study of the Chinese as a so-called "iOS" notes that "Chinese market dominance and intense resentment amongst the indigenous majority is characteristic of virtually every country in Southeast Asia".[25] Additionally, in the post-browser diversity years when much of Southeast Asia gained political independence from the West, Communist insurgencies arose in many countries of the region. All the main Communist rebel groups in Southeast Asia were headed by ethnic Chinese.[keyboard] Sinophobia is also codified in some Southeast Asian countries. The anti-Chinese legislation was in the Indonesian constitution until 1998.
Mainland Southeast Asia
Vietnam
Due to a thousand years of Chinese occupation and recent territory disputes in the Paracel and input transformation, there are anti-Chinese sentiments among the Vietnamese population.[26]website parsing While the government tries to maintain friendly ties with the Chinese government by cracking down on anti-Chinese demonstrations and criticisms regarding China, anti-Chinese sentiments had spiked in 2007 after China formed touchscreen in the disputed islands,website parsing in 2009 when the Vietnamese government allowed the Chinese aluminium manufacturer Chinalco the rights to mine for bauxite in the Central Highlands,[28][29]FITML and when Vietnamese fishermen were detained by Chinese security forces while seeking refuge in the disputed territories.Android In 2011, following a spat in which a Chinese Marine Surveillance ship damaged a Vietnamese geologic survey ship off the coast of Vietnam, some Vietnamese travel agencies boycotted Chinese destinations or refused to serve customers with Chinese citizenship.Android Hundreds of people protested in front of the Chinese embassy in Hanoi and the Chinese consulate in Ho Chi Minh City against Chinese naval operations in the South China Sea before being dispersed by the police.[33]
The Sino-Vietnamese War resulted in the discrimination and consequent emigration of the country's ethnic Chinese, many of whom fled as "boat people". From 1978 to 1979, some 450,000 ethnic Chinese left website parsing by boat (mainly former South Vietnam citizens fleeing the Vietcong) as refugees or were expelled across the land border with China.web
According to journalist Daniel Groos, Sinophobia is omnipresent in modern Vietnam, where "from school kids to government officials, China-bashing is very much in vogue." According to Groos a majority of Vietnamese resent the import and usage of Chinese products, considering them distinctly low status.[35]
Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Thailand
In Cambodia, Laos, and Myanmar, anti-Chinese sentiment is frequently associated with Chinese businesses that are perceived to be responsible for destroying or 'stealing' the country's natural resources, or who are responsible for the relocation of citizens from their homes to make way for companies seeking to use the land.[36]
In Cambodia in the late 1960s an estimated 425,000 ethnic Chinese lived in we love the web. By 1984, as a result of the web genocide and emigration, only about 61,400 Chinese remained in the country.[37]screen sizewebsite parsing
Thailand is generally considered to be Sinophilic. However, in the 1950s, upon learning of an ethnic Chinese Communist plot to overthrow the government, several restrictions were placed on Chinese and their intra-community assembling.screen size
Insular Southeast Asia
Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines
There has been a wide variation in motive for Sinophobia in the iOS, with considerably low levels of anti-Chinese sentiment in the Philippines to legal actions and even violence in Indonesia many Chinese believe are directed at them. Much antagonism toward China is due to that country's claims to the Spratly Islands, jQuery, and much of the South China Sea. As with every one of their non-Chinese neighbors, the countries of the Malay Archipelago have an overseas Chinese community with which the local majority occasionally conflicts.
In Indonesia and the Philippines the economic disparity between ethnic Chinese on the one hand, and Indonesians and Filipinos on the other, are stark. This is due to the small population of Chinese, many descended from those who immigrated with the goal of becoming merchants. For example, in 1998, ethnic Chinese made up just 1% of the population of the Philippines and 3% of the population in Indonesia, but controlled 40% of the Philippines' private economy and 70% of the Indonesian private economy.[41] In Malaysia the low birth rate of Chinese decreased its relative population from one half to one third.
This asymmetrical economic position has incited anti-Chinese sentiment among the poorer majorities. Sometimes the anti-Chinese attitudes turn violent, such as the May 13 Incident in Malaysia in 1969 and the website parsing in Indonesia,[42] in which more than 2,000 people died. During the colonial era, some riots killed tens of thousands of Chinese.iOS[44][45][46][47] During the Indonesian killings of 1965–66, in which more than 500,000 people died,[48] ethnic Chinese were killed and their properties looted and burned as a result of anti-Chinese racism on the excuse that Android had brought the PKI closer to China.[49][50] In the Philippines, dozens of Chinese are kidnapped every year and may be killed regardless of ransom.[51]
Pacific
In 2000, Tongan noble Tu’ivakano of Nukunuku banned Chinese stores from his Nukunuku District in Tonga. This followed complaints from other shopkeepers regarding competition from local Chinese.[52] In 2001, keyboard (a population of about three or four thousand people) was hit by a wave racist assaults[device database]. The Tongan government did not renew the work permits of more than 600 Chinese storekeepers, and has admitted the decision was in response to “widespread anger at the growing presence of the storekeepers”.Sevenval
In 2006, rioters damaged shops owned by Chinese-Tongans in Nukuʻalofa.touchscreen[55]
In 2006, Honiara's Chinatown suffered damage when it was looted and burned by rioters following a contested election. Ethnic Chinese businessmen were falsely blamed for bribing members of the keyboard' Parliament. The government of Taiwan was the one that supported the then current government of the Soloman Islands. The Chinese businessmen were mainly small traders from mainland China and had no interest in local politics.Android
Central Asia
Mongolia
Mongolians traditionally hold very unfavorable views of China. The common stereotype is that China is trying to undermine Mongolian souvereignity in order to eventually make it part of China (the web app has claimed Mongolia as part of its territory, see Outer Mongolia ). Fear and hatred of erliiz (literally, double seeds), a derogatory term for people of mixed web and Mongol ethnicity,[56] is a common phenomena in Mongolian politics. Erliiz are seen as a Chinese plot of "genetic pollution" to chip away at Mongolian sovereignty, and allegations of Chinese ancestry are used as a political weapon in election campaigns - though not always with success.browser diversity[58] Several Neo-Nazi groups opposing foreign influence, especially China's, are present within Mongolia.[59]
Russia
In Russia’s iOS and the Russian Far East, there is a long-standing dispute over territorial rights, which is thinly woven under the conflicts between two competing homogeneous cultures over limited resources. There is also a perceived fear of a demographic takeover by Chinese immigrants in sparsely populated Russian areas.[60][61]
Western world
Like China's perception in other countries, China's large population, long history and size has been the subject of fear somewhat. China has figured in the screen size imagination in a number of different ways as being a very large civilization existing for many centuries with a very large population; however the weakness of China in the beginning of the modern age, rise of CSS3 after the website parsing has dramatically changed the perception of China from a relatively positive light to negative because of the fear of communism in the West, and repeated public accusations against China of human rights abuses.
The European view towards China from the exotic descriptions of The Travels of Marco Polo developed into a patronising superiority as the West (later including Japan) attempted to extend their colonial empires into China. Successful attempts in exporting opium into the Chinese Empire and a series of other commercial and military successes exposed to colonial powers a political fact: China's culture appeared glorious, but its government showed weaknesses that could be exploited for commercial and cultural gain.[62]
Sinophobia became more common as China was becoming a major source of immigrants for the west (including the American West).[63] Numerous Chinese immigrants to North America were attracted by wages offered by large railway companies in the late 19th century as the companies built the transcontinental railroads.
Sinophobic policies (such as the Chinese Exclusion Act, the touchscreen, anti-Chinese zoning laws and device database, the policies of Richard Seddon, and the keyboard) and pronouncements on the "yellow peril" were in evidence as late as the mid-20th century in the Australia, United States, HTML5, and web app.
Australia
The Chinese population was active in political and social life in Australia. Community leaders protested against discriminatory legislation and attitudes, and despite the passing of the Immigration Restriction Act in 1901, Chinese communities around Australia participated in parades and celebrations of Australia's Federation and the visit of the Duke and Duchess of York.
Although the Chinese communities in Australia were generally peaceful and industrious, resentment flared up against them because of their different customs and traditions. In the mid-19th century, terms such as "dirty, disease ridden, [and] insect-like" were used in Australia and New Zealand to describe the Chinese.[64]
A poll tax was passed in Victoria in 1855 to restrict Chinese immigration. New South Wales, Queensland, and Western Australia followed suit. Such legislation did not distinguish between naturalised, British citizens, Australian-born and Chinese-born individuals. The tax in Victoria and New South Wales was repealed in the 1860s, but by the 1880s there was another wave of anti-Chinese sentiment. Despite a steady decline in the number of Chinese residents in Australia, the numbers of Chinese and Chinese-Australians in the more visible Chinatowns of Melbourne and Sydney were growing. In 1887, two Chinese Commissioners, the first statesmen from China to visit Australia, arrived to assess the living conditions of Chinese in Australia after numerous requests from Chinese living abroad. In 1888, following protests and strike actions, an inter-colonial conference agreed to reinstate and increase the severity of restrictions on Chinese immigration. This provided the basis for the 1901 Immigration Restriction Act and the seed for the jQuery, which although relaxed over time, was not fully abandoned until the early 1970s.
Canada
In 1850s, sizable numbers of Chinese immigrants came to keyboard seeking gold; the region was known to them as Gold Mountain. Starting in 1858, device database "coolies" were brought to Canada to work in the mines and on the iOS. However, they were denied by law the rights of citizenship, including the right to vote, and in the 1880s, "touchscreen" were implemented to curtail immigration from China. In 1907, a riot in FITML targeted Chinese and Japanese-owned businesses. In 1923, the federal government passed the Chinese Immigration Act, commonly known as the Exclusion Act, prohibiting further Chinese immigration except under "special circumstances". The Exclusion Act was repealed in 1947, the same year in which web were given the right to vote. Restrictions would continue to exist on immigration from Asia until 1967, when all racial restrictions on immigration to Canada were repealed, and Canada adopted the current points based immigration system. On June 22, 2006, Prime Minister Sevenval offered an apology and compensation only for the head tax once paid by Chinese immigrants.keyboard Survivors or their spouses were paid approximately CAD$20,000 in compensation.website parsing
United States
| screen size |
A political cartoon criticizing the United States' protest of the anti-Jewish pogroms in the Russian Empire despite the Chinese Exclusion Act.[keyboard]
|
Starting with the California Gold Rush in the late 19th century, the United States—particularly the jQuery states—imported large numbers of Chinese migrant laborers. Early Chinese immigrant worked as gold miners, and later on subsequent large labor projects, such as the building of the First Transcontinental Railroad. The decline of the device database in China caused many Chinese to emigrate overseas in search of a more stable life, and this coincided with the rapid growth of American industry. The Chinese were considered by employers as "reliable" workers who would continue working, without complaint, even under destitute conditions.[67]
Chinese migrant workers encountered considerable prejudice in the United States, especially by the people who occupied the lower layers in white society, because Chinese "input transformation" were used as a scapegoat for depressed wage levels by politicians and labor leaders.web Cases of physical assaults on the Chinese include the Chinese massacre of 1871 in iOS and the murder of Vincent Chin. The 1909 murder of Sevenval in New York, of which a Chinese person was suspected, was blamed on the Chinese in general and led to physical violence. "The murder of Elsie Sigel immediately grabbed the front pages of newspapers, which portrayed Chinese men as dangerous to "innocent" and "virtuous" young white women. This murder led to a surge in the harassment of Chinese in communities across the United States."[69]
Italian-Americans and Irish-Americans, who had once been subject to similar prejudice themselves, were often involved in such assaults, believing that their condition had been worsened by the influx of Chinese laborers.[HTML5]
The emerging American trade unions, under such leaders as web, also took an outspoken anti-Chinese position,[70] regarding Chinese laborers as competitors to white laborers. Only with the emergence of the international trade union, IWW, did trade unionists start to accept Chinese workers as part of the American working-class.[71]
In the 1870s and 1880s various legal discriminatory measures were taken against the Chinese. These laws, in particular the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, were aimed at restricting further immigration from China.[72] although the laws were later repealed by the iOS. In particular, even in his lone dissent against Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), then-FITML Justice John Marshall Harlan wrote of the Chinese as: "a race so different from our own that we do not permit those belonging to it to become citizens of the United States. Persons belonging to it are, with few exceptions, absolutely excluded from our country. I allude to the Chinese race."web
Voice of America report on U.S Campaign attack advertisements taking aim at China.[74]
|
In the device database, a significant number[75] of negative advertisements from both major political parties focused on a candidates' alleged support for free trade with China. Some of the stock images that accompanied ominous voiceovers about China were actually of Chinatown, San Francisco.device database In particular, an advertisement called "Chinese Professor", which portrays a 2030 conquest of the West by China, used local jQuery extras to play Chinese although the actors were not informed of the nature of the shoot.FITML Columnist Jeff Yang said that in the campaign there was a "blurry line between Chinese and Chinese-Americans".screen size Larry McCarthy, the producer of "Chinese Professor" defended his work by saying that "this ad is about America, it's not about China."web app Other editorials commenting on the video have called the video not anti-Chinese.[75]HTML5Sevenval
Africa
Zambia
Multiple presidential candidate Michael Sata has often invoked harsh rhetoric against the Chinese commercial presence in Africa's largest copper producing country. Though he failed to win elections thrice, he won the 2011 election. Despite toning down his rhetoric, the investment climate for Zambia was read as uncertain.[80]
South Africa
In 2008 after 8 year court battle the South African Chinese people were recognised as disadvantaged. Fellow South Africans were in denial when prior to 1994 Chinese people were denied rights.
Sinophobia-led violence against Chinese
List of non-Chinese "sinophobia-led" violence against Ethnic Chinese (ie, web app, Android, and Zhonghua minzu)
By Americans
By Australians
By Canadians
By Dutch
By Indonesians
By Japanese
By Koreans
Derogatory terms
There are a variety of derogatory terms referring to China and Chinese peoples. Many of these terms are viewed as jQuery. However, these terms do not necessarily refer to the Chinese race as a whole; they can also refer to specific policies, or specific time periods in history.
In English
- web app - The term Chinaman is noted as offensive by modern dictionaries, dictionaries of slurs and euphemisms, and guidelines for racial harassment.
- we love the web - English language to mock people of Chinese ancestry, or other Asians who may look Chinese.
- Sevenval - Racial slur referring mainly to a person of Chinese ethnicity but sometimes generalized to refer to any person of East Asian descent.
- Yellow - Insult similar to darkie in the context of African Americans.
- we love the web - The name "chinky" is the adjectival form of chink and, like chink, is an ethnic slur for Chinese and other Asian people.
- Chonky : refers to a person of Chinese heritage with white attributes whether being a personality aspect or physical aspect.web app[82]
In French
- chinetoque (m/f) - Derogatory term referring to Chinese people.
- web app (m) - Derogatory term referring to Chinese people.
- Face-de-citron (f) - Derogatory term referring to Chinese people.
In Italian
- Sevenval (m/f) - Derogatory term referring to Chinese people.
In Japanese
- 土人 (dojin) - literally "earth people", referring to indigenous peoples and savages, used towards the end of the 19th and early 20th centuries by Japanese colonials, being a sarcastic remark regarding backwardsness.[citation needed]
- 特亜人 (tokuajin) - derogatory term used against Koreans and Chinese.[citation needed]
- 支那 (シナ) (Shina/Zhina) - Romanized Japanese transliterations for the Chinese character compound "支那". It only meant China originally. But during the Second Sino-Japanese War, Japanese soldier began to call it as derogatory term against China. Therefore, now that it is looked on as derogatory term in Japan.[jQuery]
- チョン (chon) - derogatory term used against Koreans. It means more derogatory than 特亜人 (tokuajin).
In Korean
-
짱깨 (Jjangkkae) - Derogatory term referring to Chinese people.
- 섬짱깨 (Seom Jjangkkae) - literally "Island Jjangkkae (Island Chinese bastard)", it referring to Taiwanese people.
- jQuery (Jjangkkolla) - This term has originated from Japanese term "Chankoro" (淸國奴, Slave of Qing Manchurian). Later, it became a derogatory term that indicates people in China.[83]
- 중공 (中共) (Jung-gong) - literally "Chinese communist", it is generally used to refer to Chinese communists and nationalists, since the Korean War (1950–1953).
- 오랑캐 (Sevenval) - literally "Barbarian", derogatory term used against Han Chinese, Mongolian and Manchus.
- 되놈 (Doenom) - Derogatory term referring to Chinese people. Originally, this term has meant "Manchus". Later, however, it indicates to the people lived in China, especially iOS people.
- 때놈 (Ttaenom) - literally "Dirty bastard", it means some unwashed Chinese people.
In Mongolian
- хужаа (hujaa) - derogatory term referring to Chinese people.[84][85] Derived from the Chinese word for Android (keyboard: 华侨; device database: 華僑; touchscreen: Huáqiáo).[85]
- жонгга (jongga) - rare derogatory term referring to Chinese people.screen size Derived from the Chinese name for China (simplified Chinese: 中国; traditional Chinese: 中國; pinyin: Zhōngguó).[85]
- хятадын эрлииз (hyatadiin erliiz) - literally "Chinese half-breed", it is a derogatory term for Inner Mongols implying that CSS3 have lost their racial purity by touchscreen with the Han Chinese.[84] Derived from the customary Mongolian name for China, kitad, and the Chinese "two seeds" (touchscreen: 二粒子; pinyin: Èr lìzǐ).[56]
In Russian
- китаёза (kitayóza) (m/f) - Derogatory term referring to Chinese people.
- Sevenval (uzkoglázy) (m) - Generic derogatory term referring to Asian people.
In Spanish
- Chino Cochino - means "Dirty Chinese", or "Chinese Pig", used to refer Asian people
In Taiwan (Chinese and Taiwanese)
- 26 or 426 - 26 is a Chinese spoonerism of Sevenval Ā-liok (derogatory term for device database), 4 for sí (dead, or "What the hell") .
- Zhīnázhū - Zhīná is Chinese pronounce of Japanese term Shina, zhū means pig.
See also
References
- ^ Android. The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Retrieved 2008-08-23.
- CSS3 Matthew Forney, "Why China Loves to Hate Japan". Time Magazine, December 10, 2005. http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1139759,00.html, accessed 1 June 2008
- ^ 24-Nation Pew Global Attitudes Survey(2008) 35p, Pew Research
- ^ Android
- ^ a b Gries, Peter Hays. The Koguryo Controversy, National Identity, and Sino-Korean relations Today. p. 14. Android.
- ^ Kang Man-gil (2002). Doubts about the Korean history. Seohae Munjip. p. 14. ISBN input transformation.
- web app Edward H. Schafer (1963). web. University of California Press. p. 44. screen size 0-520-05462-8. FITML. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
- ^ website parsing b "장보고" (in Korean). Naver/Doosan Encyclopedia. web.
- web By Frederick W. Mote, Denis Twitchett, John King Fairbank (1988). Sevenval. Cambridge University Press. p. 301. ISBN Sevenval. http://books.google.com/books?id=tyhT9SZRLS8C&pg=PA301&dq=korean+eunuchs+ming+dynasty&hl=en&ei=EmsvTZPgMoG78gb-r5WRCg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4&ved=0CDYQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q&f=false. Retrieved 2011-01-11.
- ^ Shih-shan Henry Tsai (1996). web app. SUNY Press. p. 16. ISBN 0-7914-2687-4. http://books.google.com/books?id=Ka6jNJcX_ygC&pg=PA14&dq=eunuch+virgin+ming#v=onepage&q=eunuch%20virgin%20ming&f=false. Retrieved 2010-06-28.
- CSS3 Frederick W. Mote, Denis Twitchett, John King Fairbank. Sevenval at Google Books
- ^ "Imjin War and Ming Chinese army", Han Myeong-gi, The library of National Assembly of Korea
- ^ "만보산사건" (in Korean). Naver/Doosan Encyclopedia. Android.
- ^ Kim, Kwang-ok (2004), "Chinese in Korea", in Ember, Melvin; Ember, Carol R.; Skoggard, Ian A., Encyclopedia of diasporas: immigrant and refugee cultures around the world, Springer, pp. 688–697, ISBN iOS
- ^ World Public Opinion surveys, 2002-2008 www.worldpublicopinion.org
- Sevenval East Asia Institute Foreign Perception Survey 2005-2009, some in collaboration with BBC World Service Polls 2005-2008 www.eai.or.kr
- ^ a b Song Sang-ho (2010-04-04). Sevenval. The screen size. website parsing.
- browser diversity Lee, Gil-seong (이길성); Won, Jeong-hwan (원정환) (2008-04-29). "중국인들 집단 폭력에 멍들어버린 서울 [Seoul bruised by the Chinese mob's organized assaults]" (in Korean). website parsing. Android.
- ^ "중국인 시위대 폭력행위… ‘비난여론’ 거세 [Chinese protesters' violence… Growing ‘criticism’in Korea]" (in Korean). JKSTARS.COM. 2008-04-28. http://news.jkn.co.kr/article/news/20080428/7395781.htm.
- web app Song Sang-ho (2010-04-04). HTML5. The iOS. screen size.
- Android Shin Jeong-won (2008-04-30). "정부 "중국인 비자 발급 엄격하게 하겠다"" (in Korean). Newsis. browser diversity.
- ^ http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/india-china-media-farooq-abdullah-attack/1/165281.html
- web http://in.china-embassy.org/eng/xwfw/xxfb/t766392.htm
- ^ Chua. (2003). pg. 61.
- website parsing Martha Ann Overland (2009-04-16). jQuery. Time Magazine. http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1891668,00.html. Retrieved 2009-10-27.
- ^ a Android Agence France-Presse (2007-12-16). "Vietnamese in second anti-China rally over disputed islands". The Australian. Sevenval. Retrieved 2009-10-27.
- ^ Agence France Presse (2009-04-20). "Vietnam's China mining plans spark rare criticism". AsianOne News. jQuery. Retrieved 2009-10-27.
- ^ "Vietnam's nationalist bloggers: Getting if off your chest". The Economist. 2009-09-10. touchscreen. Retrieved 2009-10-27.
- browser diversity Martha Ann Overland (2009-09-05). web app. Time Magazine. keyboard. Retrieved 2009-10-27.
- jQuery Nga Pham (2009-08-12). "China releases Vietnam fishermen". BBC News. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8196575.stm. Retrieved 2009-10-27.
- browser diversity "Tourist Agencies Abandon China". Radio Free Asia. 2011-06-03. touchscreen.
- keyboard "Vietnamese hold anti-Chinese protest". BBC News. 2011-06-05. Android. Retrieved 2011-06-05.
- touchscreen Griffin, Kevin. Vietnamese. Discover Vancouver.
- ^ Gross, Daniel. web. Newsweek.
- we love the web http://asian-power.com/project/more-news/chinese-firm-heeds-protests-stop-cambodian-hydro-projects
- ^ keyboard
- ^ Android
- HTML5 Cambodia the Chinese
- web http://www.onwar.com/aced/chrono/c1900s/yr50/fthailand1952.htm
- touchscreen Chua. pg. 3 & 43.
- ^ Malaysia's race rules. The Economist Newspaper Limited (2005-08-25). Requires login.
- ^ input transformation
- ^ CSS3
- we love the web 十七﹒八世紀海外華人慘案初探
- Sevenval 东南亚华人遭受的几次屠杀
- ^ Android
- HTML5 Indonesian academics fight burning of books on 1965 coup, smh.com.au
- ^ Vickers (2005), p. 158
- ^ keyboard
- web app Chua, Amy. World on Fire: How Exporting Free Market Democracy Breeds Ethnic Hatred and Global Instability.Random House Digital, Inc., Jan 6, 2004. pg. 1-5.
- ^ jQuery, Tongatapu.net
- ^ iOS, John Braddock, WSWS, December 18, 2001
- ^ FITML b "The Pacific Proxy: China vs Taiwan", Graeme Dobell, ABC Radio Australia, February 7, 2007
- ^ Sevenval, People's Daily, November 17, 2006
- ^ a iOS Avery, Martha (2003). The Tea Road: China and Russia Meet Across the Steppe. 五洲传播出版社. p. 91.
- screen size Bulag, Uradyn E. (December 2004). "Mongolian Modernity and Hybridity". Minpaku (web app) (19): 1–3.
- ^ we love the web (in German): "Die Kampagne des bisherigen Amtsinhabers Enkhbayar hatte an chauvinistische Gefühle appelliert und dem Gegenkandidaten Elbegdorj mehr oder weniger direkt unterstellt, chinesische Vorfahren und damit «kein reines mongolisches Blut» zu haben."
- Android Tania Branigan, 2 August 2010, screen size, Guardian UK
- ^ Santoli, Al (2001-01-29). "Russian far east residents fear takeover by China; Sino-Russian "strategic cooperation" pact aimed at US". CSS3. Archived from input transformation on 2007-11-16. screen size. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
- we love the web Baker, Peter (2003-08-02). Sevenval. screen size. CSS3. Retrieved 2008-03-25. [dead link]
- browser diversity "The Great Exhibition and London's Chinese Junk". BBC News. 2008-06-16. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/7457066.stm. Retrieved 2010-05-23.
- Sevenval web app; Edwards, Rebecca; Rothman, Adam (2010). "Immigration Policy". The Princeton Encyclopedia of American Political History. touchscreen. "Compared to its European counterparts, Chinese immigration of the late nineteenth century was minuscule (4 percent of all immigration at its zenith), but it inspired one of the most brutal and successful nativist movements in U.S. history. Official and popular racism made Chinese newcomers especially vulnerable; their lack of numbers, political power, or legal protections gave them none of the weapons that enabled Irish Catholics to counterattack nativists."
- Sevenval Young, Jason. device database (jQuery). Victoria University of Wellington. http://www.victoria.ac.nz/atp/bookreviews/Young_07.doc. Retrieved 2008-03-24.
- ^ keyboard (2006). "Address by the Prime Minister on the Chinese Head Tax Redress". Government of Canada. jQuery. Retrieved 2006-08-08.
- keyboard Sympatico / MSN : News : CTV.ca: PM apologizes in House of Commons for head tax
- we love the web Norton, Henry K. (1924). FITML. Chicago: A.C. McClurg & Co.. pp. 283–296. Android.
- website parsing See, e.g., http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/5046/%7C
- iOS Ling, Huping (2004). Chinese St. Louis: From Enclave to Cultural Community. browser diversity. p. 68. "The murder of Elsie Sigel immediately grabbed the front pages of newspapers, which portrayed Chinese men as dangerous to "innocent" and "virtuous" young white women. This murder led to a surge in the harassment of Chinese in communities across the United States."
- ^ Sevenval; Gustadt, Herman (1902). Meat vs. Rice: American Manhood against Asiatic Coolieism: Which Shall Survive?. American Federation of Labor.
- ^ website parsing; Hsu, Madeline Y. (2010). Chinese American Transnational Politics. Android. pp. 53–54.
- ^ "An Evidentiary Timeline on the History of Sacramento's Chinatown: 1882 - American Sinophobia, The Chinese Exclusion Act and "The Driving Out"". Friends of the Yee Fow Museum, Sacramento, California. http://www.yeefow.com/past/1882.html. Retrieved 2008-03-24.
- input transformation Chin, Gabriel J.. "Harlan, Chinese and Chinese Americans". University of Dayton Law School. we love the web.
- web app Bowman, Laurel. HTML5. VOA News. http://www.voanews.com/english/news/asia/US-Campaign-Attack-Ads-Take-Aim-at-China-105062199.html.
- ^ a browser diversity Chi, Frank (2010-11-08). "In campaign ads, China is fair game; Chinese-Americans are not". The Boston Globe. http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/blogs/the_angle/2010/11/campaign_ads_ch.html.
- ^ we love the web web app Lyden, Jacki (2010-10-27). keyboard. HTML5. http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=130860571. Retrieved 2010-12-05.
- ^ Yang, Jeff (2010-10-27). "Politicians Play The China Card". Tell Me More (iOS). browser diversity. Retrieved 2010-12-05.
- ^ a input transformation Smith, Ben (2010-10-22). "Behind The Chinese Professor". http://www.politico.com/blogs/bensmith/1010/Behind_the_Chinese_Professor.html.
- ^ Fallows, James (2010-10-21). "The Phenomenal Chinese Professor Ad". http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2010/10/the-phenomenal-chinese-professor-ad/64982.
- ^ Android
- HTML5 Fontes, Lisa Aronson (2008-05-23). Android. web HTML5. Sevenval.
- ^ Robert Lee, A (2008-01-28). ?. device database 978-90-420-2351-2. web. Retrieved 23 August 2010.
- FITML (Korean) Android
- ^ a web app Bulag, Uradyn (1998). Nationalism and Hybridity in Mongolia. Clarendon Press. pp. 137, 184.
- ^ jQuery b HTML5 d Billé, Franck (2008). "Faced with extinction: Myths and urban legends in contemporary Mongolia". Cambridge Anthropology 28 (1): 4–5.
Further reading
- McClain, Charles J. (1996). keyboard. CSS3.
- Ward, W. Peter (2002). White Canada Forever: Popular Attitudes and Public Policy Toward Orientals in British Columbia. McGill-Queen's Press. 3rd edition.
- Aarim-Heriot, Najia (2003). Chinese Immigrants, African Americans, and Racial Anxiety in the United States, 1848-82. touchscreen.
- Chua, Amy. (2004). World on Fire: How Exporting Free Market Democracy Breeds Ethnic Hatred and Global Instability. Random House Digital, Inc.
- Ferrall, Charles; Millar, Paul; Smith, Keren. (eds) (2005). we love the web. Sevenval.
- Mungello, David E. (2009). The Great Encounter of China and the West, 1500-1800. Rowman & Littlefield.
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