Writing?? It is Kanji they are similar
Kanji, Chinese characters.
The simple past tense of "wring" is "wrung". This is also the past participle form.
Kung Fu is Chinese, a lot of people mistake it for being Japanese because Japan once colonized China.
They are not. The Chinese languages is written purely in character form. Japanese uses a standard "alphabet" and uses Chinese characters to denote meaning. Korean typically has its own "alphabet" called hangul and Chinese characters are almost never used.
The Chinese influenced the Japanese in many ways, however religion and language are the main two. Before the isolationist period the Japanese went through form the 15th to 19th century, there was much trade and communication between the two empires.
The Japanese adapted Chinese characters to create their own writing system known as kanji. Over time, they also developed two additional phonetic scripts, hiragana and katakana, to supplement the use of kanji. This combination of scripts is known as the Japanese writing system.
The current Japanese writing systems of kana and kanji is largely influenced by Chinese characters. The kana themselves are derived from certain key Chinese characters, while kanji (literally means "Chinese/Han characters") are partially unmodified from Chinese characters (but that may change in a matter of time).
Japanese form of what?
In Chinese, nouns typically don't change form to indicate plurality. Plurality is usually indicated by context, quantifiers, or specific words used before the noun. For example, to specify plural you might use "们" (men) following a pronoun, or a quantifier like "些" (xiē) before a noun.
Origami is actually a Japanese art form that involves folding paper into different shapes and designs. While paper folding may have originated in China, origami as we know it today is closely associated with Japanese culture and traditions.
In geometry, when quadrilaterals tessellate, they fill a finite or infinite space with no overlaps or gaps between shapes. All quadrilaterals tessellate because they can all be linked together side by side in some shape or form with no overlaps. In geometry, when quadrilaterals tessellate, they fill a finite or infinite space with no overlaps or gaps between shapes. All quadrilaterals tessellate because they can all be linked together side by side in some shape or form with no overlaps.
The Japanese invasion during the Second Sino-Japanese war temporarily unified the Chinese by giving them a common enemy. Prior to the invasion, China was in the midst of a civil war between the Communist party and their opposition, who supported the government. The civil war was suspended after the invasion and the two groups came together to form the Second United Front to fight off the Japanese.