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  2. Blading (professional wrestling) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blading_(professional...

    In professional wrestling, blading is the practice of intentionally cutting oneself to provoke bleeding. [1] It is also known as "juicing", "gigging", or "getting color". [ 1 ] Similarly, a blade is an object used for blading, and a bladejob is a specific act of blading.

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  4. Drawing lots (decision making) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drawing_lots_(decision_making)

    Sortition, the practice of randomly selecting political officials from a larger pool of candidates. Drawing lots (cards), the practice, in card games, of cutting or drawing a random card to determine seating, partners, or first dealer. The Nose Game; Kau chim – Chinese fortune telling practice

  5. Tameshigiri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tameshigiri

    Tameshigiri (試し斬り, 試し切り, 試斬, 試切) is the Japanese art of target test cutting. The kanji literally mean "test cut" (kun'yomi: ためし ぎり tameshi giri). This practice was popularized in the Edo period (17th century) for testing the quality of Japanese swords. [1]

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  7. Scarification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scarification

    Scarification is not a precise practice; variables, such as skin type, cut depth, and how the wound is treated while healing, can make the outcome unpredictable compared to other forms of body modification. A method that works on one person may not work on another.

  8. Kirigami - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kirigami

    In the United States, the term kirigami was coined by Florence Temko from Japanese kiri, ' cut ', and kami, ' paper ', in the title of her 1962 book, Kirigami, the Creative Art of Paper cutting. The book achieved enough success that the word kirigami was accepted as the Western name for the art of paper cutting. [1]

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