English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I am Hispanic,but most people think im Asian,or something the first time they meet me.Maybe its because im petite?.or my dark brown hair..idk what do you think.Have you ever mistaken a hispanic women for Asian or something??..

2006-12-08 04:55:51 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Cultures & Groups Other - Cultures & Groups

10 answers

sometimes i do but i think itis mostly because of the eyes

2006-12-11 07:54:04 · answer #1 · answered by Brandi S 4 · 0 0

If you look back at when the land bridge developed (ie Ice age) there was a population migration to the americans. they came for the eastern parts of the world (russia, japan, etc). there was also a study done on native american teeth that i caught a few years ago on TV. They are shaped similiar to asian/oriental teeth. Something about being scooped shape.

2006-12-08 07:06:26 · answer #2 · answered by Denise K 1 · 1 0

I have mistaken a mixed asian girl for a hispanic but never a hispanic for an asian. anyway, both are nice looking.

2006-12-08 05:18:32 · answer #3 · answered by Kramersaidthenggerword 1 · 0 0

There are HIspanic Asians, I know that. Well I do know as a fact that many Native peoples came from Asia. They migrated over from the places around Mongolia, Russia, etc. I have read in Wikipedia that they are considered Mongoloids. Check out Wikipedia. Lastly, I read in a seperate Wikipedia article that people who are Spanish/Black/Native are triracial.
From Wikipedia
New World Mongoloids
The Indigenous Peoples of the Americas are believed to have entered the American continent from Asia between 35 to 25 thousand years ago. See Models of migration to the New World. The earlier of these migrations are known as Amerindians, and they are distinct from the subsequent migrations who would become the indigenous populations of Arctic North America (the various Alaskan and indigenous Arctic Canadian groups such as the Inuit, Innu, and Aleuts).

The indigenous groups of Arctic North America — including the Haida people of British Columbia on the northwest coast — can often resemble Central Asians and even Northern Asians (such as Koreans or Japanese), making them much closer to the Northern Mongoloid type than even Southeast Asians.

The Amerindians, however, are often considered a separate population pool to, or at most a distant division of, Mongoloids. The Amerindians branched off of archaic or proto-Mongoloids from Siberia and other parts of Northeast Asia, including the Ainu or such groups related to them (See Kennewick man). From that point in time, when they crossed over to North America and dispersed into Central and South America, they evolved independently for tens of thousands of years, not coming into contact with any Old World populations until the arrival of Europeans just over 500 years ago. This large time gap of separate isolated evolution resulted in certain distinct genetic and physical characteristics not found in Old World Mongoloids or the indigenous groups of Arctic North America.

The indigenous groups of Arctic North America are always clustered with Old World Mongoloids due to their recent arrival and their shared evolution.

Boyce Rensberger claims that New World Mongoloids may be partially Caucasoid. He reports that the 9,300 year old remains of a man unearthed in Kennewick, Washington as having Caucasoid features. This has led anthropologist D. Gentry Steele to hypothesize that there were two separate waves of Caucasoid and Mongoloid migrations into the Americas. Many anthropologists consider these two physical types to have mixed in ancient history, resulting in the broad range of physical types of New World Mongoloids. Anthropologist Owsley considers a proto-Caucasoid physical type in Northeast Asia to have been the forebearer of the Caucasoid physical type in the Americas. Others speculate that the Caucasoid physical type may have arisen independently from the Mongoloid physical type in the Americas.[19]


read article: http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongoloid

2006-12-09 14:48:21 · answer #4 · answered by Fidelito Martínez 1 · 1 0

Nope...people think im Asian Indian but im a multiracial American. Maybe you have similar features of Asian women.

2006-12-08 05:03:46 · answer #5 · answered by PreciousRuby 3 · 0 0

It's funny you say that, some people think that I'm part asian too. My eyes are kinda chinky and my hair is fine and straight. At that, my last name is a very common last name in the Philippeans. Take Wilfredo Lam for example, he was a Cuban born painter/artist who was also part Chinese, Spanish and African.

2006-12-08 05:02:25 · answer #6 · answered by precious_jules81 5 · 0 1

definite, while you evaluate that's like announcing blondes are the ideal women interior the international!¸ I even have no longer something against blonde hair even with the undeniable fact that it`s somewhat pathetic for non-blondes to think of they are god's presents to each and all of the solid looking, beautiful, handsome men merely by using fact they could have the money for to spend alot of money on the salon to bleach their hair blonde. people who dye their blond by using fact their blond hair grew to become gray and individuals who dye their brown hair blond while you evaluate that they had blond hair as babies are merely being themselves no longer attempting to be somebody else like those empty headed nothings who're those that provide blonds a bad call.

2016-12-30 03:38:46 · answer #7 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

you got to be kidding,, you need glasses if you believe that

2006-12-08 05:10:51 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Do you have like slanty eyes? Maybe your eyes are slanty or something.

2006-12-08 05:06:01 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

yep.

2006-12-08 08:16:17 · answer #10 · answered by Wandering Sage 6 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers