Tart is pronounced tà.
Tart, pronounced tà, refers to hitting someone with a whip, stick, etc. Derived from attacking, slapping. E.g.: Whipping the populace is saddening. --Tang Gao Shi's "Fengqiu Zuo" (封丘作). Grouping words: flogging, tarting, tarting and flogging, tarting, tarting, frivolous tarting, egg tarting, tarting, tarting Chu, ticking and tarting, goblet tarting, spicy tarting, killing tarting, speech tarting, criticizing tarting, list tarting, whacking tart, tarting, tarting, tarting, tarting, tarting, tarting and punishing, tarting, tarting, tarting, tarting, tarting, tarting, tarting, tarting, tarting, tarting, tarting, tarting, tarting, tarting, tarting, tarting, tarting.
Chinese characters are used to write Mandarin Chinese and its dialects, and can also be borrowed to write languages such as Japanese and Korean. It is the only official script of China and one of the official scripts of Singapore, and currently dates back exactly to the oracle bone inscriptions of the Shang Dynasty. In Japanese, it is used in combination with hiragana and katakana.
Chinese characters were also once one of the official scripts of the Lee Dynasty of Korea (Sejong of Joseon invented Proverbs, also known as Choson/Korean, in the 15th century), and are now used in South Korea only when Chinese characters are needed to mark the meaning of a word in order to avoid ambiguity, and in North Korea, where all spelling is in Proverbs.
Handwriting, also known as Chinese characters, Chinese characters, and national characters, is an ideographic grapheme-syllable script, invented and improved by the Han Chinese, and is one of the four oldest autochthonous scripts in the world (cuneiform from the Valley of the Two Rivers, the sacred script of Ancient Egypt, the oracle bone inscriptions of the Shang Dynasty in China, and the Mayan script), and is the only one of them that has been in use to the present day.
Handwriting is the longest continuous use of Chinese characters in the history of the world, and Chinese characters have been used as the main official script in China throughout the ages. A milestone in the development of Chinese characters was the change from the official script to the official script of the Han Dynasty, when Chinese characters were named "hanzi" (隶书). The evolution of Chinese characters is as follows: prehistoric symbols, oracle bone inscriptions of the Shang Dynasty, gold inscriptions and the Great Seal Script of the Zhou Dynasty, the Small Seal Script of the Qin Dynasty and the Preliminary Seal Script of the Preliminary Seal Script of the Qin Dynasty, the Official Script of the Han Dynasty, the Regular Script of the Tang Dynasty (which is the standard for handwriting fonts today), the Cursive Script, the Jyutsu.
As follows:
The history of Chinese characters is at least 4,000 to 5,000 years old, based on existing ancient documents and confirmed archaeological discoveries, and the history of the origins of Chinese characters is the history of the beginnings of ancient Chinese civilization.
That's why we usually say that the Chinese nation has a 5,000-year history of civilization. Archaeological and documentary records show that Chinese characters originated in the Yangshao culture period, about 4000 BC, and began to enter the character accumulation stage in 2000 BC, forming a sizable writing system at the beginning of the Shang Dynasty.