When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cheng Man-ch'ing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheng_Man-ch'ing

    When pressed on the issue, he called his form "Yang-style tai chi in 37 Postures." However, the postures in his form are counted differently from those in the Yang Chengfu form. In the older form each movement counts as a posture, whereas in the Cheng form postures are counted only the first time they are performed, and rarely or not at all ...

  3. List of tai chi forms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tai_chi_forms

    13 - Yang Family 13-Form; 13 - Chu style Yang form Long 108 and Short 37 movements; 14/16 - Guangbo (Guang-Bo) (a mixture of Chen, Yang, Wu, and Qigong that was done by factory workers in China) 16 - Yang Standardized; 16 - Chen Standardized; 16 - Actually Chen 4 Step (see above) popularly repeated in four directions of the compass (Zhu Tian Cai)

  4. Yang-style tai chi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yang-style_tai_chi

    Now the most popular long tai chi form in the world, the classic Yang Chengfu form retains the health and self-defense benefits of the original 300-movement sequence in only 150 movements, most commonly divided by teachers today into 85, 88, 103, or 108 "postures" or stopping points.

  5. Yang Shaohou - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yang_Shaohou

    The empty-hand form taught by Wu Tunan generally follows the 73 posture sequence of the old Yang style, and was developed with Yang Shaohou on the foundation of Wu Tunan's Wu-style background. It contains 37 core postures plus repeats and transitions, and instructors often present it in 50 to 139 moves.

  6. 103-form Yang family tai chi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/103-form_Yang_family_tai_chi

    Other Yang style schools may have significantly different enumeration schemes. The moves can also add up to 85, 88, 108, 113 [ 1 ] or 150 [ 2 ] depending on how they are counted. The book called Yang Shi Taijiquan ("Yang-style tai chi"), by Fu Zhongwen , breaks the form into each of its discrete movements.

  7. Tai chi classics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tai_chi_classics

    The book includes the well known "Ten Essential Points of Tai Chi Theory" authored by Yang. [4] [7] Wu Kung-tsao (Wu Gongzao; 1902–1983) provided original texts and commentary on the previously mentioned Forty Chapters in Wu Family T'ai Chi Ch'uan. [8] Wu's grandfather Wu Quanyou had inherited the Forty Chapters from Yang Banhou.

  8. Wang Peisheng - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wang_Peisheng

    He was noted for his expertise in the self-defence methods of Wu-style tai chi. In the 1950s he developed a shortened 37 posture Wu-style form presented in his book 'Wu-Style Tai Chi' (Zhaohua Publishing House, Beijing, 1983). [1]

  9. Taoist tai chi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taoist_tai_chi

    Taoist tai chi is a form of tai chi which is taught in more than 25 countries by the non-profit International Taoist Tai Chi Society and associated national Taoist Tai Chi societies. It is a modified form of Yang-style tai chi developed by Taoist monk Moy Lin-shin in Toronto, Ontario , Canada .