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Roth

PostPosted: Thu Jul 14, 2005 8:28 am


Uggae
Moonlight Penguin
And I shall you give you a brief Korean 101 class

poomse= form
shojak= begin (used in sparring, I'm just thinking of how it's spelled when it's said)
dojan= school
sabanim= instructor
hanamashimika= hello, how are you?
casamida= thank you
hana= one
dul= two
set= three
net= four
dusa= five
usa= six
igool= seven
yudur= eight
ayhoo= nine
yur= ten

This is just coming from how i think it's spelled.. I can be wrong.

most of them are
and you ran all your sylibals to gether thats a no no in korean seeing as hangul is sylibale based rather them word based
im not shure of poomse because ive never heard of that word but the others i can help on seeing as my instructor let me borrow his book that teahces korean

si jak-begin
do chang-school
Sa bom nim-master
(crap greetings are writen in hangul and im still working on my pronuncinations sweatdrop )
Ha na-1
Dool-2
set-3
net-4
da sot-5
yuh sot-6
Il gop-7
yo dull-8
ah hope-9
yohl-10
im not being mean to you just trying to help you pronunce things right


I've been counting out those numbers so long for running and variuos other exercises I've been forgeting to pronounce the "l"s.
I count ha na, doo, set, net, do sot, yo set, igop, yo dur, ah hope, yoh sweatdrop
PostPosted: Fri Jul 22, 2005 2:22 pm


Roth
Uggae
Moonlight Penguin
And I shall you give you a brief Korean 101 class

poomse= form
shojak= begin (used in sparring, I'm just thinking of how it's spelled when it's said)
dojan= school
sabanim= instructor
hanamashimika= hello, how are you?
casamida= thank you
hana= one
dul= two
set= three
net= four
dusa= five
usa= six
igool= seven
yudur= eight
ayhoo= nine
yur= ten

This is just coming from how i think it's spelled.. I can be wrong.

most of them are
and you ran all your sylibals to gether thats a no no in korean seeing as hangul is sylibale based rather them word based
im not shure of poomse because ive never heard of that word but the others i can help on seeing as my instructor let me borrow his book that teahces korean

si jak-begin
do chang-school
Sa bom nim-master
(crap greetings are writen in hangul and im still working on my pronuncinations sweatdrop )
Ha na-1
Dool-2
set-3
net-4
da sot-5
yuh sot-6
Il gop-7
yo dull-8
ah hope-9
yohl-10
im not being mean to you just trying to help you pronunce things right


I've been counting out those numbers so long for running and variuos other exercises I've been forgeting to pronounce the "l"s.
I count ha na, doo, set, net, do sot, yo set, igop, yo dur, ah hope, yoh sweatdrop
Good. Then there's yohl-hana, yohl-dul, etc. All the way up to Semul.

MoonSoo


GenkiPseudo

PostPosted: Sun Jul 24, 2005 2:44 pm


DarklingGlory
Triste
DarklingGlory
JoshuaKenzo
Taekwondo, I believe, has roots in many different styles.
Including different styles of karate (Okinawan) and Kung Fu (Chinese).
Seeing as though they could probably give either Japanese, Okinawan, Chinese or Korean names for one same technique, I can imagine there'd be some confusion sometimes.

It has its roots in Karate (the originator of TKD was blackbelt in karate before working on TKD), ancient korean foot fighting like Tae Kyon* and little bits from elsewhere like kungfu. In proper TKD the names of things are all in korean (no japanese or chineese, especially not japanese as there is more than a little emnity between the two countries), but they use different words for it. Such as Poomse, Kyong and Tul. They are basically korean words for things like pattern, form, "sequence", etc. It has quite a lot to do with association, the ITF mainly uses Tul and WTF mainly uses Poomse and various splinters of both using Kyong

* apparently the ancient "knight/samurai" class of korea, the Hwarang (Hwarangdo - "The way of the Flowering Manhood" or "The art of the Flower Knights") used high jumping kicks to deal with mounted opponents

Damn, you covered just about everything I was gonna say. xp

I don't think Gung Fu influenced it that much, though.


Sorry xd
No Gung Fu didn't influence that much, just little bits here and there. It was mainly karate and korean foot fighting. Its interesting to note that General Choi (the founder of TKD) started on his path by learning calligraphy under one of the most famous teachers in Korea, Mr. Han II Dong. Han, in addition to his skills as a calligrapher, was also a master of Taek Kyon, the ancient Korean art of foot fighting. The teacher, concerned over the frail condition of his new student, began teaching him the rigorous exercises of Taek Kyon to help build up his body.
Yet another link between martial arts and calligraphy... they seem to crop up quite often dont they?


Well speaking on a technical level, Gung Fu deeply influenced early Karate and therefore influenced Tae Kwon Do.
PostPosted: Sun Jul 24, 2005 3:28 pm


I took Sambo for a while.

Mirko_Filipovic


MoonSoo

PostPosted: Mon Jul 25, 2005 4:20 pm


true2you
what kinda karate do you take . and what level or belt are you ? im a black belt in taekwando . 3 years of training finally payed off !!! lol
Wow, if you are a black belt in Tae Kwon Do and trained for 3 years, then you would know that Tae Kwon Do and Karate are different. Perhaps you should ask what style do we use perhaps? I myself have been a second dan black belt in Tae Kwon Do for quite awhile, along with first dan in Hapkido, personal training of Tang Soo Do by my father (Was a student of Tang Soo Do back in Korea) and kickboxing. Non of these are any styles of Karate.
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Martial Arts Crew v2.0

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