UFC is not the same a karate. UFC is a Mixed Martial Art. Some of the UFC fighters have trained in karate and put the skills to use in the ring.
Any form of martial art can be used in UFC. As long as you don't use any illegal techniques it doesn't matter.
Lyoto Machida has a Background in Shotokan, BJJ, and even some Sumo when he was younger.
Woman and men are equally the same at karate if they practise the same amount of time.
There really is no equivalent word for karate. Many will use the style of karate, such as Shidokan or Shotokan or Isshinryu, but that is a sub-set of karate rather than saying the same thing. And karate is a sub-set of martial arts, so that is not the same.
judo - ippon dont know about karate though Same thing in Karate, ippon.
Zuffa, same that owns the UFC
because hapkido applies alot of teakwondo, aikido, and karate it would not be such a bad choice, but most of it relies on your trainer and coach.
Lyoto Machida is a mixed martial artist who fights in the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC). He utilizes his training in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, Shotokan Karate and Sumo wrestling in the ring. He is currently ranked #1 in his weight class in UFC.
There is no antonym of Karate. It's the same thing as asking, "What's the opposite of Chocolate?"
The same way that any individual trains and learns karate. They study with an instructor.
A karate dojo is a business. It is subject to the same taxes and regulations all businesses are responsible for.
Wrestling, as you would see in the olympics, etc, is a part of UFC fighting, but UFC fighting also contains other elements of fighting, including kickboxing and various styles of groundfighting. If you are asking if the UFC is the same as WWE, no, it is not scripted in any way.