As of today, Mar 11, 2013, Vietnam has only one living cardinal Jean-Baptiste Phạm Minh Mẫn (Vietnamese: Gioan Baotixia Phạm Minh Mẫn).
The proper adjective for "Vietnamese" is "Vietnamese." For example, "Vietnamese cuisine" or "Vietnamese culture."
Vietnamese Vietnamese
The College of Cardinals has been pleased to have in its ranks illustrious names such as: 1) James Cardinal McIntyre, Cardinal Archbishop of Los Angeles 2) Ernesto Cardinal Ruffini, Cardinal Archbishop of Palermo 3) Francis Cardinal Spellman, Cardinal Archbishop of New York 4) Raphael Cardinal Merry del Val, Cardinal Secretary of State 5) Alfredo Cardinal Ottaviani, Cardinal Secretary of the Holy Office 6) Dennis Cardinal Dougherty, Cardinal Archbishop of Philadelphia 7) Samuel Cardinal Stritch, Cardinal Archbishop of Chicago 8) Edward Cardinal Mooney, Cardinal Archbishop of Detroit 9) Giuseppe Cardinal Siri, Cardinal Archbishop of Genoa 10) Manuel Goncalves Cardinal Cerejeira, Cardinal Patriarch of Lisbon 11) Pietro Cardinal Gasparri, Cardinal Secretary of State
The northern cardinal.
Northern Cardinal is the state bird of West Virginia.
Dad in Vietnamese is ba Mom in Vietnamese is me
The possessive form of the singular, proper noun Vietnamese is Vietnamese's.Example: The Vietnamese's passport is in order, the others' are not.Note: The noun 'Vietnamese' is a word for a person from Vietnam.The word Vietnamese is also an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.Example: He carried a Vietnamese passport.
Sino-Vietnamese vocabulary is a part of the Vietnamese language. So, yes. Vietnamese know a lot of 'Sino-Vietnamese' as 50-60% of Vietnamese consists of words of Chinese origin or Sino-Vietnamese. For example, the word 'at' is Tai in Vietnamese (from 在 'Zai' in Chinese), to come in Vietnamese is 'Lai' (same as in Chinese 来 'Lai'), country is Quoc in Vietnamese (from 國 Gwok in Cantonese), and the list could co on for hundreds and thousands of pages. Without Sino-Vietnamese vocabulary, Vietnamese wouldn't be a language - it would merely be a skeleton with flesh.
Hernia in Vietnamese is called "thoát vị".
cô ấy
Vietnamese