kendo and karate
Kendo or Karate.
The attendance at Kendo Championships can vary significantly depending on the event's scale and location. Major international competitions, like the World Kendo Championships, can attract thousands of participants and spectators from around the globe. National and regional championships typically have smaller attendance numbers, often in the hundreds. Overall, Kendo events generally see a dedicated but varying crowd each year.
Sumo, karate, kendo, and judo
Judo, Karate, Kendo
it is sumowresling as i have search on google
They are all martial arts from Asia. Kung fu is from China and karate is from Okinawa. Judo, kendo and aikido are Japanese.
A kendo style of fighting helped to spawn judo and karate and is considered a main component to their defensive stances in combat and in offensive moves against opponents.
Sport karate is geared towards competition rather than as a martial art. Budō is simply a Japanese word for martial arts, with gendai budō referring to styles that came about after the Meiji restoration - karate, aikido, judo, kendo etc. As such ALL karate is "budo karate".
Kendo
Kendo uses, I believe, the same belt grading system common throughout Japan. Like in Judo and Karate at the black belt level there are "Dan" grades. Pretty much the same grading system used in Judo and Karate (10th to 1st kyu and 1st to 10th Dan*), the only real difference is that in kendo usually there's no difference in belt colour or anything like that, there's no way one can tell the difference between a begginer and an experienced kendoka just looking at the clothes. *Nowadays, 8th Dan is the highest rank possible in kendo, since there are no more 9th or 10th Dan holders alive.
Sumo, martial arts, baseball, and association footbal, regularly. Martial arts include judo, karate, kung fu, and modern kendo.