“Keri” is ‘kicking’ in Japanese but when you
say the name of a certain kick, ‘keri’ changes to ‘… geri’ just for the
convenience of pronunciation.
First, I explain
some words for direction and parts of a foot.
mae = ‘front’
yoko = ‘side’ ushiro = ‘backward’
Chu-soku / chuusoku
: “chu” is ‘middle’ and “soku” is ‘foot’. “chusoku” is the part under the toes.
Hai-soku : “hai” is ‘back’ like ‘back of the body’ and “soku” is ‘foot’. Same “hai” as in “hai-to”.
Tei-soku : “tei” is ‘bottom’ and “soku” is ‘foot’. It’s the bottom of the foot.
Soku-to / sokutou :
“soku” is ‘foot’ and “tou” is ‘sword’
kakato : ‘heel’
★ Mae ke age : “mae” is ‘front’, “ke” is from the word
“keri” and “a-ge” is ‘to raise/lift something up’. As “maekeage” means to kick your leg to the front
and high above.
★ Hiza-geri : “Hiza” is ‘knee’. It’s a knee kick.
★ Hiza-geri : “Hiza” is ‘knee’. It’s a knee kick.
★ Kin-geri : It means ‘kick to the groin’. A man’s groin is called “Kin-tama” in Japanese, which means ‘Golden
balls’! You kick with “hai-soku”. (please don't use the word "kin-tama" in public..)
★ Mae-geri (Chudan mae-geri/ Jodan mae-geri)
: ‘Front kick’ (to the middle level/ to the higher level). You kick with “chu-soku”.
★ Mawashi-geri : “mawashi” is to turn something around/make a circular movement. “mawashi-geri” is ‘round kick’.
★ Mae-geri (Chudan mae-geri/ Jodan mae-geri)
: ‘Front kick’ (to the middle level/ to the higher level). You kick with “chu-soku”.
★ Mawashi-geri : “mawashi” is to turn something around/make a circular movement. “mawashi-geri” is ‘round kick’.
Will be continued
in the next blog
What is the koshi
ReplyDeleteIt is a hip/lower back
DeleteKhin geri
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