Central Vietnam is known for its well-preserved historical sites, smiling locals, and soothing natural beauty. The central coast will beckon you with the promise of enriching experiences and sun-kissed days by the beach.. "/>
CĂąu há»i: I was born in Viet Nam. So Vietnamese is my____________. A. tongue mother. B. tongue language. C. second language. D. mother tongue. HĂŁy suy nghÄ© vĂ tráșŁ lá»i cĂąu há»i trưá»c khi HOC247 cung cáș„p ÄĂĄp ĂĄn vĂ lá»i giáșŁi. MĂŁ cĂąu há»i: 53932.
Whenever someone asks me, "What is your ethnicity?" my answer is, "I am Vietnamese." Technically speaking, I am Vietnamese-American meaning I am ethnically Vietnamese, but I was born and raised in the United States.
Hi all, We have a problem that we are hoping all the knowledgeable folks on this forum can help. I am sponsoring my wifes green card. I am a US citizen and she is a Canadian citizen. She was born in Vietnam, but left when she was only 5 days old. She never got a birth certificate from Vietnam. We
Many beaches in the central city of Danang have been badly damaged after the recent flooding. The dike at My Khe Beach faces serious erosion. Lots of waste is seen on the beach. Warning boards about erosion have been placed at the site. The park along the beach was left in a mess after the flood water receded. The pavement was badly damaged.
Delivery & Pickup Options - 398 reviews of Simply Vietnam Express "Today's the day - Santa Rosa's favorite Vietnamese restaurant opens its new speedy service satellite in the former McDonald's location on Cleveland Ave. Fans of the original will not be disappointed, the food and friendly service are identical (although the menu is smaller to fit the fast food model.)
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This article is copublished with The Oaklandside, a nonprofit newsroom that amplifies community voices, shares trustworthy information, and investigates systems, not symptoms for Oakland, Calif. Sonia Ohlalaâs YouTube videos usually begin with a friendly greeting in Vietnamese. From the grandpas and grandmas out there, ĂŽng and bĂ , to the uncles and aunties, cĂŽ and chĂș, to her peers, anh and em, she wishes them all kind regards and hopes that they are in good health. She talks with a warm respect in her voiceâthe kind thatâs culturally expected of you, if you are a younger member of the family. Without missing a beat, she then launches into a Vietnamese broadcast of the latest news, starting with Donald Trump. âLet me show you a beautiful photo of Donald Trump as he is playing golf,â she said in one video published on May 26, 2023. âHe bends down and picks up golf balls, like itâs not a problem.[âŠ] Heâs a very healthy person at 76.â Even though he has not been president in the past two years, most of Ohlalaâs YouTube broadcasts revolve around the former president, translating content from far-right outlets like Newsmax, The Gateway Pundit, or Breitbart, according to her public YouTube community page. For some Vietnamese immigrants to the like Oakland resident Duyen Hoang, 56, Ohlalaâs videos are one of the few news sources she can access, because theyâre in Vietnamese. Hoang watches Ohlala regularly on YouTube and believes Donald Trump is a good and accomplished man, even if she knows that Ohalaâs videos may not always be based on reliable informationâor be giving her the local news she sorely needs. âI really just need more information about my hometown Oakland,â Hoang said. As part of an Information Futures Lab fellowship at Brown University, I spoke to Hoang and about two dozen fellow community members to better understand what role Ohlala and other YouTubers play in their community. Hoang also gave me access to her entire YouTube archive so I could understand the context of how these videos show up in her feed. When I asked community members where they get their news, only a handful of people said they tuned into the local TV station or read any local English language articles. They used to have to wait for a weekly newspaper, Tuáș§n bĂĄo MĂ”, produced in nearby Sacramento to get news in Vietnamese, they said. But now everyone used YouTube to receive information, and almost everyone seemed to know Ohlala. âWe no longer have to wait for news,â said Long Van Nguyen, 76, who also watches Ohlalaâs videos. âNow we can get news as soon as we open our eyes in the morning.â YouTube broadcasters like Ohlala cater to immigrant communities in the who speak little to no English, who are often starved for information about their immediate environment and have limited options for where they can get their news. After examining dozens of Ohlalaâs videos and speaking with experts, The Markup found that news aggregators and commentators like Ohlala often omit information that would give the news cultural or historical context, and, in Ohlalaâs case, her content is repackaged from right-wing organizations. The Markup reached out multiple times to Ohlala to request an interview but did not receive any response before publication. In the description of a second YouTube channel, she wrote â⊠due to Youtube censorship, Sonia has added a second backup Youtube channel. Sonia does not cooperate with other stations or Youtube sites.â This community has a problem that many immigrant communities have It needs reliable information about the community in its language. While some national and international news organizations deliver news in Vietnamese, such as the Vietnamese services of the BBC or French radio broadcaster RFI, only a few outlets deliver online information in Vietnamese about the let alone regional news relevant to the Bay Area. This need for quality news became even more pertinent in the past few years. Hoang and many other members of the community found themselves lost in a sea of information and misinformation about COVID-19. Her need for quality news was heightened further when she started feeling more and more unsafe in her neighborhood as an Asian immigrant. Around the country there was a surge of hatred against Asians, with anti-Asian hate crimes increasing by 339 percent in 2022 according to data compiled by the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism. Headlines about brutal attacks against Asian men and women across the country made national news. Anti-Asian hate became prominent at a time when President Donald Trump dubbed COVID-19 the âChina virus.â This community felt this in their neighborhood. The pandemic brought about the most unequal recession recorded in history, and it took a particularly devastating toll on Black and Latino communities, which was felt in the Bay Area as well. In tandem, the city of Oakland saw a rise in homicides though this trend has reversed most recently. Vietnamese community members experienced this by word of mouth, too They heard about a friend who was beaten and whose necklace was stolen. They heard of a Vietnamese-owned coffee shop being robbed. At the same time, the entire nation and Oakland were embroiled in a âracial reckoningâ that brought about protests, clashes with police, and, in some rarer cases, looting across the country and in Oakland. Imagine experiencing all this without a news organization delivering you information in the language you understand. Where do you turn? Who can help you clarify all these complex and concurring issues? This particular community largely turned to YouTube. Hoang is part of a small group, started by my uncle, of about 100 Vietnamese immigrants in Oakland who regularly meet on Saturday mornings. Most came to the in the 1990s as part of an asylum program specifically targeting former political prisoners. My uncle, a political prisoner himself, started bringing people together 30 years ago to help other former political prisoners. Over time, he expanded to help the Vietnamese community at large. Some people are in their 50s and several are in their 70s. All were born in Vietnam and came to the well into their adulthood. A handful of them speak enough English to have basic conversations, but the majority of them conduct their daily lives, including getting the news, entirely in Vietnamese. Every Saturday morning they rent out a basement and get together to sing and help one another. When I joined them one Saturday in March, one of the members had his laptop wired to a television set. He was searching YouTube for karaoke versions of Vietnamese songs that they sing together every week. A couple of women were making lunch together, using ingredients they bought during the week at Vietnamese supermarkets. Caption Duyen Hoang preparing food for the Saturday-morning group. CreditLam Thuy Vo/The Markup Amid these joyful gatherings, they also do vital things that are important to the well-being of this community administering yearly flu shots, participating in neighborhood activities like street cleanups, and assisting each other with voter registration. This is not unique to the Vietnamese community. There are countless DIY care networks within Asian and other immigrant communities that swoop in where government entities have failed. Theyâve organized microgrants, self-defense, and food distribution to help ailing Chinatown businesses. The Asian community has also taken security into its own hands as community members have felt sidelined by both local politicians and police forces that help only when itâs too late. This feeling of neglect is also reflected in how this community perceives most news outlets. Despite their neighborhood being roughly 20 percent Asian, members of the group told me they often feel overlooked by the mainstream media. In response, many members of this group have adopted a way of building DIY self-help methods to inform themselves. They exchange information about their neighborhood and the latest news or what they read about in Tuáș§n bĂĄo MĂ”, which they can pick up during their community gatherings. If a crime happens in a Vietnamese business nearby, the group messages each other in group texts or on Facebook to keep an eye out. They said that once, when they called police, officers only showed up hours after the incident and were not of help. They also said that English-language media only rarely cared about what was going on in their community. Tuyet Nguyen, 70, for example, says that in the morning he puts on the local TV station, turns on the closed captioning, and âthen I can understand a little.â But for most news about current events and politics he turns to YouTube. There, he receives news about ongoing events in his home country through YouTube channels based in Vietnam. And thatâs also where he looks for more information about American news, often relying on algorithmically produced recommendations to discover content. âThereâs a lot of news about Trump or Bidenâ on YouTube, he said. âWe canât watch only one video. We have to watch different onesâwatch this channel and another channelâand we combine them to see whatâs right.â He said he watches a lot of Ohlalaâs videos. Caption Tuyet Nguyen left and Hoa Thi Mai Huynh right discussing their YouTube habits. CreditLam Thuy Vo/The Markup Hoangâs watch and search history on YouTube reflects this DIY approach, too. Her viewing history dates back to 2020. From it I can tell that Hoang uses YouTube to help her make better decisions about her life from spiritual guidance from Buddhist monks to instructional cooking videos to getting medical advice. To get a better understanding of the breadth and depth of what Hoang watches on YouTube, with her permission I categorized a random sample of 1,000 videos from her archive. âNewsâ represents videos with information about current events and politics from various sources, such as vloggers who discuss the news and official news organizations based in Vietnam. âEntertainmentâ represents films and talk-show-like content that discuss lifestyle issues and music many were karaoke versions of songs. âHealthâ includes information about symptoms of a sickness or the health benefits of certain foods. âInstructional videosâ teach, for example, by showing viewers how to cook a dish or care for plants. Itâs only natural that Hoang and her peers would also find news on the platform. And unlike other news organizations, Ohlala and other YouTubers meet her where she already is. â©ïž linkNews out of Context When Black Lives Matter protests filled the streets in Oakland, this community said they became afraid of looting. Viral imagery of Black men shoving and beating older Asian adults also increased their fear. Amid national headlines around protests and anti-Asian hate, they did not have much information they could act on or use to understand underlying issues. Looting narratives around protests have a long history of distracting from mostly peaceful protests in the according to Time. A search of Ohlalaâs videos for any mention of the BLM movement only returned one video, which was broadcast after police in Brooklyn Center, Minn., and Chicago, Ill., killed a Black man, Daunte Wright, and a Latino boy, Adam Toledo, in 2021. Ohlala explains that there have been many Black Lives Matter protests in Washington, but she does not mention the deaths of Wright or Toledo or any information about what sparked the protests. Instead, she talks about a Telegram text message exchange, which focuses on one womanâs bad experience with Black women. Ohlala then gives recommendations to Vietnamese folks to not speak to Black people and avoid conflict. She says that some Black people, under Biden, âhave received a waiver to be more aggressive.â There are sweet and kind Black people, too, she said. But she also said to avoid conflict with Black people, even on the streets. CreditYouTube Caption Sonia Ohlala discussing BLM protests on YouTube. In recent years, a network of news aggregators some of which are anonymous has cropped up on social media and focuses heavily on amplifying violent incidents where attackers were Black and victims were Asian, according to an August 2020 report about disinformation from the National Council of Asian Pacific Americans and the Disinfo Defense League. The stories and social posts are often rewritten news articles with eye-grabbing headlines or reports of old incidents that aggregators use as proof that official channels are underreporting anti-Asian crimes perpetrated by Black people, weaponizing the victimhood of Asians, the report stated. One headline on an Instagram account identified by the report âBlack-on-Asian violence claims another life in New York City.â âNearly every other day, it seems an Asian-American is attacked or murdered by criminal elements within the African-American community,â the caption of the post said. âThe documented lack of coverage about Asians and Asian Americans in mainstream media and news have left voids filled by sources and online hubs ⊠with a singular emphasis on pro-Asianâ identity,â the report said. âThese spaces foster problematic narratives that pivot on existing structures of misogyny, anti-Black racism, and xenophobia.â Much of the discourse around combating this kind of hyperpartisan misinformation centers on either debunking false claims or translating news from mainstream information. But this approach doesnât take context into consideration. Getting contextual information about their immediate environment is really about âlivelihood issues,â said Nick Nguyen, a volunteer with the nonprofit Viet Fact Check. The organization publishes summaries of trustworthy reports from mainstream media organizations or academic papers in Vietnamese and contextualizes the information so it culturally makes more sense for the Vietnamese community. And so the harms when you donât have [quality] information coming from other sources ⊠can actually be quite Nguyen, Viet Fact Check Instead of framing the issues around the BLM movement just through the lens of injustice, Nguyen suggested showing that, according to polls, most Black folks just want the same policing that White people enjoy. He said this is something that is much more relatable and would also help the Vietnamese community make better decisions around policies and voting. Otherwise, when getting news about BLM through YouTubers like Ohlala, Vietnamese community members only see âa very angry set of people who are justifiably angry. [But] you donât have that context to base the anger on. So youâre really afraid of it because, if youâre a refugee, any kind of civil unrest is scary,â said Nguyen. Through his work at Viet Fact Check, Nguyen has also seen how dominant YouTube is in how Vietnamese speakers in the get their news. âA disproportionate amount of their news and media consumption comes from YouTube. And so the harms when you donât have [quality] information coming from other sources, the harms can actually be quite severe,â said Nguyen. Nguyen said that he and other volunteers at Viet Fact Check spoke to developers and spokespeople at YouTube to raise issues around misinformation on the platform. When this did not result in meaningful change, he pitched the stories about misinformation in immigrant communities to mainstream news media to put pressure on the company. They have also written many articles that bring context to issues and that look into highly politicized issues that pit Asians against Black populations, such as anti-Asian hate or affirmative action. In an email to The Markup, YouTube spokesperson Elena Hernandez wrote, âYouTubeâs misinformation policies are global, and we apply them consistently across languages and regions, including for Vietnamese-language videos. Additionally, we prominently surface authoritative content through recommendations in every market we operate.â She also wrote that YouTube had reviewed Ohlalaâs channel and âdetermined that it does not violate our policies.â âAt the end of the day, people are [âŠ] just trying to live their lives,â said Nguyen. âThe problem Iâm trying to solve is not to make people believe what I believe, of my morality, but to give them useful protective information. So they can make decisions that are aligned with their self interest.â This story was produced as part of a fellowship with the Information Futures Lab.
How to say "I'm from" in Vietnamese and 36 more useful More Nationalities Vocabulary in VietnameseExample sentencesAmerican EnglishI'm from the word for "I'm from" in 45 More Spanishyo soy deBrazilian Portugueseeu sou deIndonesianaku berasal dariEuropean Portugueseeu sou deOther interesting topics in VietnameseReady to learn Vietnamese?Language Drops is a fun, visual language learning app. Learn Vietnamese free more words like "tĂŽi Äáșżn từ" with the DropsDrops Courses
Khoanh vĂ o ÄĂĄp ĂĄn ÄĂșng 1. I was born in Vietnamese is my________________. A. first language B. second language C. foreign language D. modern language 2. He got good grades for Enghlish, but his Math result is_______________. A. rich B. poor C. bad D. well 3. How many___________are there in a school year, Nam ? A. comments B. sounds C. results D. semesters 4. His parents are very ____ _______of his intelligenve. A. dangerous B. greedy C. proud D. interested 5. She can__________her pronunciation after spending some months in Australia. A. learn B. speak C. revise D. improve 6. Please _____________this word. It is very important. A. come across B. underline C. stick D. promise 7. Can I use your__________? I don't understand this word . A. dictionary B. list C. report D. grammar 8. I know you worked really__________this semester. A. good B. satisfactory C. hard D. hardly 9. Try to learn the meaning of new words__________heart. A. at B. on C. in D. by 10. She told me_________at that table. A. not sit B. not to sit C. not sitting D. didn't sit 11. Our team won the game because we played very ______ ________. A. good B. well C. goody D. better 12. You__________take the baby to the doctor. A. should B. ought C. need D. has to 13. The doctor________he should take a few days off. A. say B. said C. ask D. tell 14. He was more than a little proud________himself. A. about B. to C. of D. for 15. We left at 6 ____late. A. so as not to be B. so as not to being C. so as to be D. so as not to being 16. He usually____________ or highlights only the word he wants to learn. A. underlines B. understands C. underlined D. understood 17. She works very_________ A. hard B. hardly C. studious D. careful 18. You__________drink and drive. A. shouldn't B. oughtn't C. don't to have D. needn't 19. The teacher told us_____ _______talk. A. not to B. not C. don't D. do not to 20. He promise__________me A. to help B. helping C. help D. to helping 21. I was very___________to be able to help. A. please B. pleased C. pleasuse D. pleasing 22. Try_________here on time. A. to be B. be C. being D. to being 23. You have to promise __________anyone. A. not to tell B. won't tell C. not telling D. don't tell is studying again something that you have learnt, before an exam. A. Revision B. Experiments C. Practice D. Semester 25. Let me__________your bag. A. carry B. to carry C. to carrying D. carrying
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i was born in vietnam vietnamese is my