Well, it can be many things. Certain Martial Arts strive for different goals. Krav Maga and Pankration are very violent and focus on nothing but causing pain or killing your opponent. Tai-Chi and Aikido, for example, believe that the more damage you cause, the more your hurting your self because all life is connected. They focus on fighting as a last resort, and controlling your opponent so less pain is applied. Really, all you can do is follow your morale code and laws. Follow the beliefs you were raised on, and the beliefs that you believe to be true. And you can achieve that by following those codes and laws and beliefs in everything you do everyday of your life. Martial Arts truly is a way of life.
Bow.
hi you know what this means.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................martial arts
If you mean martial arts then yes. Though not Chinese, Judo and Tae Kwon Do are martial arts and Olympic Sports. Mixed Martial Arts is a popular sport that uses parts of different martial arts, and some Chinese arts can be incorporated into this at appropriate times.
Dojos. Dojo is Japanese for "place of the way". It can mean any formal training area, but typically it is associated with martial arts.
??? Do you mean do you need muscles for matial arts? If yes, than it depends on what kind of matial arts
Do jang is a Korean term. It refers to the school where the martial art is taught. In Japanese it is a dojo.
They signify rank and experience.
The actual phrase is vo thuat, which is Vietnamese. It simply translates in English to mean martial arts. You can find a lot of videos on Youtube that feature Vietnamese vo thuat martial arts.
The term SHO-DAI SOKE, in Japansee bugei (martial arts) generally refers to a founder or first generation head of a martial arts system or family.
A weight class in mixed martial arts welterweight if that's what you mean
I think you mean "Taiko" body drum
Well, Wushu is the Chinese term for martial arts in general but also refers to a Chinese martial art with the same name.