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Morote Tsukami uke: augmented grabbing/throwing block; Mawashi uke: roundhouse or circle block (e.g. in the kata, Unsu) Haishu uke: backhand block (e.g. in the kata, Heian godan) Kosa uke (also known as joge uke): cross block (e.g. in the kata, Heian sandan) Teisho awase uke: hands together block (e.g. in the kata, Gankaku) Zenwan uke: forearm ...
The following is a list of styles or schools in Japanese martial arts. For historical schools, see List of koryū schools of martial arts. Aikido; Araki-ryū ...
They are categorized into throwing techniques (nage-waza), grappling techniques (katame-waza), body-striking techniques (atemi-waza), blocks and parries (uke-waza), receiving/breakfall techniques (ukemi), and resuscitation techniques (kappo).
In Japanese martial arts, "initiative" (先, sen) is "the decisive moment when a killing action is initiated." [20] There are two types of initiative in Japanese martial arts, early initiative (先の先, sen no sen), and late initiative (後の先, go no sen). Each type of initiative complements the other, and has different advantages and ...
In Japanese martial arts such as Karate, these techniques are referred to as uke waza. Examples include age uke (rising block) and shuto uke (knife hand guarding block). In Korean martial arts such as taekwondo , these techniques are referred to as makgi (막기), with some examples being chukyeo makgi (rising block) and onkal daebi makgi ...
Vital points used in attack [2]; Japanese English Hichu This pressure point is located in the center of the lowest part of the neck, in the hollow. Shofu In the lateral aspect of the neck, in the posterior border of the Sternocleidomastoideus posterosuperior on both sides of the center of the neck.
In martial arts, a knifehand strike is a strike using the part of the hand opposite the thumb (from the little finger to the wrist), familiar to many people as a karate chop (in Japanese, shutō-uchi).
Age-uke (上げ受け), which translates to "rising block", or "upward block" is the Japanese term for a technique used in martial arts.There numerous variations in how the technique might be executed, and nothing implicit in the term itself restricts its use to unarmed techniques.