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Sode tsurikomi goshi (袖釣込腰): Sleeve lifting-and-pulling hip throw; Ippon seoi nage (一本背負投): Single-handed shoulder throw; Obi tori gaeshi (帯取返): Belt grab reversal; Kouchi makikomi (小内巻込): Small inner wraparound; Daki age (抱上): high lift, was excluded as a Kodokan officially recognized technique.
Dol or doljanchi (Korean: 돌; 돌잔치) is a Korean tradition that celebrates a baby's first birthday.. The tradition has been practiced since the early Joseon period. The ceremony typically involves the ritual offering of a samsinsang to the god Samsin (whom is said to watch over children), the preparation of a dolsang with various foods and ritual objects, and a doljabi (based on the ...
Hane goshi (跳腰): Spring hip throw; Harai goshi (払腰): Sweeping hip throw; Koshi guruma (腰車): Hip wheel; O goshi (大腰): Full hip throw; Sode tsurikomi goshi (袖釣込腰): Sleeve lifting-and-pulling hip throw; Tsuri goshi (釣腰): Lifting hip throw; Tsurikomi goshi (釣込腰): Lifting-and-pulling hip throw; Uki goshi (浮腰 ...
Pages in category "Throwing weapons" The following 23 pages are in this category, out of 23 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Arambai; B. Batarang;
Award of ippon decides the winner and ends the match. Ippon is awarded for a successful throw performed with control and power, or for a pin lasting 20 seconds. Submission by strangulation or application of an arm lock at the elbow joint also results in ippon. Awarding of waza-ari (技あり). 'One half point'.
Hip throw (腰投げ, koshi-nage) aikido's version of the hip throw. Tori drops his or her hips lower than those of uke, then flips uke over the resultant fulcrum. Figure-ten throw (十字投げ, jūji-nage) or figure-ten entanglement (十字絡み, jūji-garami) a throw that locks the arms against each other (The kanji for "10" is a cross ...
O-goshi is known to have existed in the Tenjin Shinyō-ryū traditional school of jujutsu, which Jigoro Kano studied prior to founding judo. In Tenjin Shinyō-ryū texts, the throw is called koshi-nage (腰投, hip throw) [2] O-goshi was one of the first throwing techniques to be incorporated into judo and was included in the Dai nikyo (第二教, second taught group) of the 1895 Gokyo-no-waza ...
The gandewa is a bow though it is more often referred to as a busar or busur today. The word originates from Gandiva, the legendary bow used by Arjuna of the Hikayat Pandawa Lima. It was a common hunting weapon even among the region's aboriginal tribes (orang asal), but was later replaced by the senapang or rifle. The bow is very rarely taught ...