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Koryu literally means "old flow" and is used in Japanese to refer to old styles, schools, or traditions (not necessarily only in the martial arts). The simplest English translation of this term is "classical." Bujutsu is one of several Japanese terms meaning martial arts or techniques (I won't get into the whole jutsu/do issue here; there are differences between "do" arts and "jutsu" arts but they are not as large as many people imagine, in my opinion). So, putting the two together, you get "classical martial arts" (of Japan).
This leads to the next question: What precisely is a Japanese classical martial art? Unfortunately, it is impossible to provide a precise definition. Some folks use the date of 1876, when the act prohibiting the wearing of swords (Haitorei) was promulgated, as a dividing line between classical and modern martial arts. Others prefer to use the term "koryu bujutsu" only for those arts developed for actual use on the battlefield and thus reserve the term for sixteenth century and earlier traditions.
GomiGirl wrote:Kyokushin Karate.. actually went to training last night.. It is a heap of fun and there are lots of cute boys..
kurohinge1 wrote:What is the GG ranking system for boys, I wonder ... here's a suggestion:
Danna (husband = top ranking, achieved by very few)
DDG (Drop dead gorgeous)
SW (Sponge-worthy: from Seinfeld)
CBS (Cute but stooopid)
FBM (Funny but Minikui)
etc...
kurohinge1 wrote:GomiGirl wrote:Kyokushin Karate.. actually went to training last night.. It is a heap of fun and there are lots of cute boys..
Have you ranked them?![]()
What is the GG ranking system for boys, I wonder ... here's a suggestion:
Danna (husband = top ranking, achieved by very few)
DDG (Drop dead gorgeous)
SW (Sponge-worthy: from Seinfeld)
CBS (Cute but stooopid)
FBM (Funny but Minikui)
etc...
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