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Box jumps: jump onto and off of a large box 18" or higher. [16] Vertical depth jump: starting from the top of a box, jump down and back up as fast as possible. [16] Plyometric push-up (plyo push-up): perform a push up, but exert enough upward force to lift the hands and body off the ground. [16] Broad jump (long jump). Pike jump. [17]
Full House Any Three-of-a-Kind and a pair; color is not important. Sum of all dice + 15 Full House Same Color A Full House with all dice the same color. Sum of all dice + 20 4 of a Kind Four or more dice showing the same number. Sum of all dice + 25 Yarborough Any combination. (Kismet's "Chance" category) Sum of all dice Kismet
The size of the box is determined by the height of the user and the desired level of difficulty for the exercise. For example, a taller person may need a taller box for a box jump, while a smaller person may need a smaller box for a box step-up. The box is typically a rectangular box with 50 x 60 x 75 cm (20 x 24 x 30 inch) sides. [3]
Shut the box (also called ACKPOT, [1] batten down the hatches [1] or trick-track [2]) is a game of dice for one or more players, commonly played in a group of two to four for stakes. Traditionally, a counting box is used with tiles numbered 1 to 9 where each can be covered with a hinged or sliding mechanism, though the game can be played with ...
Toe-touch jumps (or any jump) can be immediately followed by a back handspring (Level 3), back tuck (Level 4+), standing full (Level 5+). Or front tumbling can be performed out of a jump, for example to front walkover, front handspring, aerial, etc. however this is less common. There are multiple elements to be chosen out of a jump.
Example game of Dots and Boxes on a 2×2 square board. The second player ("B") plays a rotated mirror image of the first player's moves, hoping to divide the board into two pieces and tie the game. But the first player ("A") makes a sacrifice at move 7 and B accepts the sacrifice, getting one box
Four square [1] (also called handball, champ, four squares or box ball) is a global sport played on a square court divided by two perpendicular lines into four identical boxes creating four squares labelled 1–4 or A–D. [2]
As used in some Lisp implementations, a trampoline is a loop that iteratively invokes thunk-returning functions (continuation-passing style).A single trampoline suffices to express all control transfers of a program; a program so expressed is trampolined, or in trampolined style; converting a program to trampolined style is trampolining.