Eh, not particularly. I'd rather be playing with Mongolia myself, but I'm at work.
Good luck with the test!
Might want to look up the Yuan Dynasty there.
I don't believe Mongols left a lot of their influence on Chinese culture. When Ming dynasty overthrew the Yuan dynasty, they made an effort to purge everything that is Mongolian. Zheng He, the famed enuch admiral is Mongolian, who was castrated as Ming army sacked the southern China city he was in.
The Mongols savagedly massacred Chinese and Chinese retaliated when Ming took over. It's not just history, you can tell from the Neo Confucian movement during Ming dynasty as one of the evidence of Ming's effort of purging Mongolian influence and reassert Chinese culture.
Manchu left more mark on Chinese culture, but it's not that much really, it's still predominantly han Chinese. Manchu's own aristocracy had trouble learning its own language later on as too many Manchu were assimilated into the Chinese mass so to speak. That was one thing the Mongols were dreadful afraid of so they kept themselves apart from the Chinese, even took Tibet Lamanism as their "state religion" (for Yuan dynasty anyways as other Mongol empire took Islam and other religion). Manchu were quite different, the founding leader of Manchu dynasty made effort to learn and study Chinese. Early Manchu emperors had no trouble with their own language, can't say the same for later Manchu aristocrats.
The "traditional" Chinese dress, "QiPao" is Manchu dress but normal Chinese adopted it. There were some other examples that I read but I can't recall right now.
Chinese culture really is a product of countless assimilation of barbarian. If the Yuan dynasty wasn't so cruel towards Chinese, I think they would have left a much larger mark, rather than causing strong anti-Mongol reaction later.
There is a term for this, where the culture of "lower class" mass permeate upward and influence the smaller, elite ruling upper class. I learned that term in linguistics as we studied the history of English, how English has changed and the interaction of various conquer who made their mark in English. I just can't recall that term right now, argh
Some Chinese don't seem to remember or want to admit Chinese culture most likely has "barbarian" influence. I had to politely point out their own history recorded various waves of Barbarian invasions, such as "wu3hu2luan4hua2" (five barbarian invade China) and how those barbarians all were assimilated into modern day han Chinese.
It was in another thread that I pointed out Chinese culture's biggest "conquest" weapon is not its army, but rather its culture of assimilation. It's extremenly strong. Jews are pretty good at holding onto their culture but Chinese Jew is one of the few cases where they become more or less Chinese and when those Chinese Jews tried to seek their Jewish roots recently, it caused some problems as their lineage tend to trace back to their father's side while traditional Jewish culture heritage is passed from mother's side.