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Some are very large. Others are very small. Some look like your stereotypical squinty almond-shaped eyes. Others look like they're gigantic balls about to pop out a person's head. There are some traits that Asian eyes tend to have, but even then there's too much diversity to point out a classic Asian eye type (even within one ethnic group).
16 wrz 2013 · TV personality Julie Chen's recent revelation about getting plastic surgery to make her eyes look "less Chinese" has renewed a long-running discussion about how to describe an Asian...
22 sty 2023 · This article provides a comprehensive guide on how to effectively describe Asian eyes in writing. It covers topics such as almond-shaped eyes, dark, mysterious depths, deeply set in the face, framed by long, dark lashes, a piercing gaze and slanted lines at the corners.
20 cze 2023 · In many East Asian cultures, eye shape has a significant cultural and historical significance. In particular, Chinese and Japanese societies have long-held beliefs and values about the shape and size of the eyes.
Though its appearance in peoples of Southeast Asia can be linked to possible descent from cold-adapted ancestors, its occurrence in various African peoples is not open to this explanation. The epicanthic fold found in many African people has been tentatively linked to protection for the eye from the high levels of ultraviolet light found in ...
You can focus on the eyelids, which is what many East Asians often do. They refer to the eyelid without a crease (the so-called Asian eye) as a "single eyelid" and the one with a crease as a "double eyelid." You could also talk about epicanthal/epicanthic folds, but that starts to get a little technical.
TV personality Julie Chen's recent revelation about getting plastic surgery to make her eyes look "less Chinese" has renewed a long-running discussion about how to describe an Asian person's...