enow.com Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: kendo practice dummy for sale

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Noma Dōjō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noma_Dōjō

    Noma Dōjō (野間道場) is a privately owned kendo training hall, or dōjō, located in Tokyo's Bunkyo ward close to Gokoku-ji. The original Noma Dojo was established in 1925 by Seiji Noma, founder of the Kodansha publishing house, but demolished by the company in late 2007 and replaced with a modern training hall in a neighbouring office ...

  3. Kirikaeshi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kirikaeshi

    Kirikaeshi (切り返し:きりかえし), not to be confused with the backwards throw used in sumo and jujutsu with the same name, and with a literal meaning of "cutting repeatedly", is a kendo exercise, combining the practice of attacking and receiving strikes and is meant to develop physical strength, spirit, and vigor. [1]

  4. Shinai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shinai

    This holds the slats together and also marks the proper kendo striking portion of the shinai, or datotsu-bu (打突部). Inserted between the ends of the slats, under the saki-gawa , is a plastic plug saki-gomu ( 先ゴム ) , and under the tsuka-gawa there is a small square of metal chigiri ( ちぎり ) , that holds the slats in place.

  5. Kendo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kendo

    Kendo in the early Meiji period (1873) Takasugi Shinsaku, late Edo period kendo practitioner. Swordsmen in Japan established schools of kenjutsu [4] (the ancestor of kendo). These continued for centuries and form the basis of kendo practice today. [5] Formal kendo exercises known as kata were developed several centuries ago as kenjutsu practice ...

  6. Bokken - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bokken

    In 2003, the All Japan Kendo Federation (AJKF) introduced a set of basic exercises using a bokutō called Bokutō Ni Yoru Kendō Kihon-waza Keiko-hō. This form of practice is intended primarily for kendo practitioners up to Nidan ranking, but can be beneficial for all kendo students. [6] Suburitō (素振り刀) are bokken designed for use in ...

  7. Kendo Kata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kendo_Kata

    Bokuto Ni Yoru Kendo Kihon-waza Keiko-ho is a new form of bokken training that is directly translatable to bogu kendo. Bokuto Ni Yoru Kendo Kihon-waza Keiko-ho also facilitates learning the Nihon Kendo Kata, and because of this was adopted by the All Japan Kendo Federation for use in primary and secondary school.

  8. Mu ren zhuang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mu_ren_zhuang

    Mu ren zhuang (Chinese: 木人桩; pinyin: Mù Rén Zhuāng; lit. 'Wooden Man Post') or Mook Yan Jong (also known as The Wing-Chun Dummy or simply The Wooden Dummy internationally), is a training tool used in various styles of Chinese martial arts, most notably that of Wing Chun and other kung fu styles of Southern China.

  9. Bōgu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bōgu

    A set of bōgu for kendo Kendo practitioners wearing bōgu in training. Bōgu (防具, 'armour'), [1] properly called kendōgu (剣道具, 'kendo equipment'), is training armour used primarily in the Japanese martial art of kendo, [2] [3] with variants used for jūkendō, tankendo, and naginata.

  1. Ad

    related to: kendo practice dummy for sale