Car tire
Cha tai is a language belonging to the Turkic family and was once a language widely used in Central Asia. The name tea was derived from the second son of Chinggiz Khan in Chiang Kai, Taichung County, which was in the western part of the Mongol Empire. The car seems to have been destroyed in the early 20th century when the Taikan Kingdom was destroyed and continued to be used by the Bashkirian. The tea tires were heavily influenced by Arabic, Persian and nomadic Turks, and played a kind of Lingua Franca in Central Asia. The devices used in this language are roughly divided into three parts. ▪ Electricity - Classical tea time: 1400-1465 ▪ Classical tea time: 1465-1600 ▪ Late - Classical tea time: 1600-1921 This classical car, which looks Alicerina, is a poet who represents the Thai era. In modern languages, the closest language to car tires is Uzbek and Uighur, and in Uzbek, cars consider tires as a prototypical language.