Saturday, May 20, 2023

History of Ticks

 

I am not a professional Japanese translator, This is a translation I have obtained with the use of the Bing Translator. Such tools are often flawed regarding martial terminology, but personally I would rather use them gaining whatever understanding presents itself.

 

https://ameblo.jp/motoburyu/entry-12341426637.html

History of Ticks

 

NEW! 2018-01-03 11:08:49

 

 

The front hand thrust is called the tick-butting in the mainland. Is the word "tick" a translation from the boxing jab (jab)? By the way, in this step, in the mainland, "Okinawa Karate was not carved. It is widely believed that the carving was invented in the mainland.



When you try to from the headquarters flow that has been using the front hand thrusting from before the war, "Eh!? However, it seems to be so in general though it is an insistence to be amazed.






From Hand (1926) of the Okinawa Kenpo Tang surgery



By the way, this ticking poking. Then, the Kazumichi flow seems to have originated very much when it examines who invented it in the mainland. There was such an answer to the wisdom of Yahoo! Japan.




Originally, the Kazumichi flow was used.

At the beginning, the Shoto-Kan was in charge of the karate game.

With Lauda.

 

That doesn't work.

The thrust is reversed.

 

He didn't take a point with him, so he went through the name of the Shoto Museum.

It's good to lose, Mr. Otsuka said, and the player of the Kazumichi style is OK.

After losing the foul, and Soke documentation that the Shoto kan else his own technique

said.



I do not know the authenticity because it is information on the net, when you look at the video of the pledge of the hand of Dr. Otsuka Hiroki just in case, tick-poking is certainly used.



From 2 minutes to 40 seconds.



Then, it seems to be true that Mr. Otsuka of the mainland is the origin of the tick thrusting of the Kazumichi style apparently. By the way, Mr. Otsuka is a person who studied the Tang Dynasty on the basis of Headquarters morning. In the old days, Mr. Kouichi Mano, a disciple of Prof. Otsuka, said, "Dr. Otsuka was always the first to be influenced by the group morning." Perhaps, the step thrusting of this Otsuka teacher might come from the front hand thrust of the base morning group.



The posture of the married couple counterparty used by the Promise assembly hand of this Kazumichi style also thinks like the influence of the headquarters morning group. The reason is that the stance of Dr./ms. Funakoshi who had been studied by Mr. Otsuka was the stance of an orthodox lower payment.



Tony K Kawakami ·

Hmmm very interesting.

In chinese martial arts, the movement called “Dian” stands for the brush stroke. The movement is named after the brush stroke as it is a light and quick stroke leaving a small mark. This is likened to “jabbing” “poking” or “pointing”.

In Japanese the pronunciation of “Dian” is “tin”. Perhaps this is just a mistranslation? Most likely, after all the synopsis was either poorly written or poorly translated. I’d like to go with the latter. Though, it’s implied that “Mr. Otsuka” is the originator. I see Motobu Choki is the pictures, is “Mr. Otsuka” another name he went by?

I find the claim that anyone person “originating” a form of human movement is pretty lofty claim. No disrespect intended, but it’s suspect.

 

Victor Donald Smith The Google translation tool is far from perfect, especially about martial terms. But the idea generally makes sense. Unffortunately I cannot answer your questions. But it is provoking.

 

Al Mcgregor it then goes into detail about how to preform. This is just from reading and having studied Japanese at UCLA. The Bing translation is heavily flawed. Use tangorin.com for translations is my suggestion

Tangorin Japanese Dictionary

tangorin.com

 

http://tangorin.com/  Victor Donald Smith I grant the Bing tool I use is quite flawed and if one want more accurate details better translations are required,

Victor Smith

But I am just trying to follow what is being shared to see if there is any similarity to what I do. And I see a bit in something I wrote years ago for my students. https://isshin-concentration.blogspot.com/.../reach-and...

 

Christopher Clarke Motobu Choki is shown using this punch-stifling technique in several places and passed it along to Nagamine Shoshin who incorporated it into his two-man kumite series. Does anyone have confidence that such a technique is realistic or would really work?

 

Dan Young It looks like boxings "baseball catch" to me where you catch their fist like a baseball mixed with an outside parry, if peo;le drilled it there shouldnt be a problem like all proper technique.

 

Daniel Owens If you're talking about jamming the rear guard down to the hip, like we see in the second image, it's rear arm against rear arm and will work under the right circumstances, but I certainly wouldn't do it on a much bigger or stronger person, because you'll lose on entry (or they may turn that front-arm into a grab) and you're stuck on the inside.

 

Daniel Owens I guess I should point out that this attacker only used one arm -- his front guard -- in the attack. Choki stepped in, switching his guard and bringing his front guard to jam what looks to have have been a circular punch (looks like maybe a temple strike, but I'd have to see the source... it could have just been a straight punch to the face, but I don't think the step, which Choki is using to help "slip" the punch would be safe or effective for a straight punch) at the elbow. The stepping in protects against that front hand swinging and hitting him, given that the jamming arm isn't what I'd call the best structure. You'll also notice that Choki has dropped down substantially.

Victor Donald Smith I believe like most things, it may be situational. My prior piece on reach and touch someone might make some suggestions. It may be possible at the inception of such a punch. very difficult but not impossible.

The first part in parenthesis say it it about the history of Kizami Zuki

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