shirabe.org
#196,453
Meaning
  1. 1
    English · JMdict
    Sinocentrism
  2. 2
    English · Wikipedia

    The distinction between Hua (華) and Yi (夷), also known as Sino–barbarian dichotomy, is an ancient Chinese concept that differentiated a culturally defined "China" (called Hua, Huaxia 華夏, or Xia 夏) from cultural or ethnic outsiders (Yi "barbarians"). Although Yi is often translated as "barbarian", other translations of this term English include "foreigners","ordinary others" "wild tribes", and "uncivilized tribes". The Hua–Yi distinction was basically cultural, but it could take ethnic or racist overtones (especially in times of war). In its cultural form, the Hua–Yi distinction asserted Chinese cultural superiority, but implied that outsiders could become Hua by adopting Chinese values and customs. When this "cultural universalism" took a more racial guise, however, it could have harmful effects on those groups not considered 'Hua'.

    Read full article on Wikipedia · CC-BY-SA

Forms
Save this word to start reviewing it with spaced repetition. Save word

Grammar codex

What the coloured tags mean

Hiragana

ひらがな

The rounded, flowing kana. Hiragana writes native Japanese words, grammar endings, and anything without (or alongside) kanji — it's the first script you learn. Each character stands for one syllable.

Example

ねこ — cat