I depends on the context but the default swim for most people is definitely the freestyle. It is the first form a swimming taught to children. It was originally called the front crawl but after it's dominance in freestyle swim competitions (competitions where any stroke could be used) it eventually became known as freestyle swimming. It became popular in the middle of the 19th century and before that the breast stroke was the most used stroke.
In 1873, John Arthur Trudgen introduced the trudgen to Western swimming ...Swimming was part of the first modern Olympic games in 1896 in Athens. ... Butterfly was developed in the 1930s and was at first a variant of breaststroke, until it was .... and some Pacific islands for generations, but was not known tothe British.
The two strokes that are similair are freestyle and back stroke. Because it is on your back or facing forward.
The Australian Crawl is not an animal.The Australian Crawl is the name used for the style of overarm Freestyle swimming developed in Australia in the early 1900s. This is now the freestyle stroke used around the world.Australian Crawl was also an Australian band from 1978 until 1986.
---- Englishman Richard Cavill developed the modern features of the freestyle, including the overarm strokes and the flutter kick, back in 1902. Since Cavill lived in Australia at the time, the stroke was then dubbed "the Australian crawl." Prior to that time, the side-stroke was commonly used in swimming competitions. The freestyle stroke was later polished and perfected by Olympian Johnny Weismuller in the 1920s. ----
Freestyle
ISI DELTA, FREESTYLE 1,2 Freestyle 1-5 freeskate
The word has is used for the third person, and have is used for the first person. He has, I have.
If you mean for long distance competition, it would be freestyle, what used to be called the crawl, with a slow "2-beat" kick. If you mean for survival, low energy use, where you don't need speed to overcome a current, a non-official stroke called the side-stroke would be the best for just keeping afloat and moving with minimum effort.
50cc 4-stroke 50cc 2-stroke,65cc 2-stroke, 70cc 4-stroke, 80cc 2-stroke, 85cc 2-stroke, 110cc 4-stroke, 125cc 2-stroke, 125cc 4-stroke, 150cc 2-stroke, 150cc 4-stroke, 200cc 2-stroke, 250cc 2-stroke, 250cc 4-stroke, 300cc 2-stroke 350cc 4-stroke, 450cc 4-stroke, 500cc 2-stroke, 530cc 4-stroke, 690cc 4-stroke
1980 Yamaha XT250 the sound was used from a 2 stroke!
A first person pronoun is used for yourself; a second person pronoun is used for the person you are speaking to; the third person pronoun is used for someone or something else.