12/17/2023 0 Comments Tai sabaki ten![]() ![]() The categories seem to be as followsĪyumi Ashi=basic step. The book Aikido refers to footwork as Ashi-sabaki. Offline In Doshu's book New Aikido foot work in general is referred to as unsoku. ![]() I am curious to know if anyone here can delineate the difference between "tenkan" and "tenkai." and the AikiWeb AikiWiki entry on tenshin: ![]() Here is the AikiWeb AIkiWiki entry on tenkan: The term tenkai (転回) basically means "revolve and revolve." Tenkan (転換)basically means "revolve and interchange." The Japanese name of the "heaven and earth" throw (tenchi nage) does not include "tenshin." If we're talking about the "heaven and earth" throw, my preferred transliteration of the Japanese name would be "tenchi nage." If there were a technique named after the tenshin footwork, then I would write that as "tenshin nage" (with or without the space). Steven actually wrote the word tenkai.Those are two different words but now I realize that even Steven may have meant tenkan by the word tenkai so Carsten may have actually been answering the real question! I think that in the last post Carsten thought that Steven meant tenkan by the word tenkai. Ron assumed that by Tenshin, Steven meant the technique, Tenshinage. I think we need to give up on this because we all have differing understanding of certain words and there are some problems going on here. In the books of the present doshu you can see it well described. While doing this you lead uke around you. So you pivot on the other foot as fo tenkan. Tenkan is a movement, a footwork, by which you get out of the way of uke.įor tenkan you pivot just on the front foot.įor tenshin you bring your feet together, give aditional atemi, pivot on the foot which has been the rear one before. Tenshin is a movement, a footwork in which lead uke around you. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |