Body Position Leg Action Arm Action Breathing Timing
It is BLABT not BLAPT B - Body position L - Leg action A - Arm action B - Breathing T - Timing Correct sequence of teaching swimming strokes
A homophone for stand is "stann," which is a rare alternative spelling of 'stand.'
The present infinitive of "stand" is "to stand."
When the night has come And the land is dark And the moon is the only light we see No I won't be afraid No I won't be afraid Just as long as you stand, stand by me And darling, darling stand by me Oh, now, now, stand by me Stand by me, stand by me If the sky that we look upon Should tumble and fall And the mountain should crumble to the sea I won't cry, I won't cry No I won't shed a tear Just as long as you stand, stand by me And darling, darling stand by me Oh, stand by me Stand by me, stand by me, stand by me Whenever you're in trouble won't you stand by me Oh, now, now, stand by me Oh, stand by me, stand by me, stand by me Darling, darling stand by me Stand by me Oh stand by me, stand by me, stand by me
In general: If you fall into deep water and cannot swim, you could potentially drown. In training or leisure: more resistance against the water. If the swimmer does not know how to use BLABT (body position, leg kick, arm pull, breathing and timing) the stroke will become uncoordinated. The goal is to become as streamlined as possible in the water and effectively use the correct concepts of BLABT. If they execute wrong/unnecessary movements during the stroke, it will slow the stroke down and the swimmer will be fighting against the water to do the stroke. example: If the arm pull in front crawl is too wide and short (IE. it is moving too far away from the body sideways), they cannot get the distance and time as they would with a long, narrow arm pull. With a long narrow arm pull they can reach forwards and pull back gaining more distance than pulling back only a fraction of the distance with the short and wide stroke.
Stand Strong Stand Proud was created in 1982.
Stand-Up Stand-Up - 1992 Stand-Up Stand-Up 3-12 was released on: USA: 7 August 1995
sit stand
Stand to is when some one asks you to STAND and LISTEN
The future tense of stand is "will stand."
Crips don't have a specific way to stand, they can't stand however they wanna stand.