Tsuki - Karate, Its Variants, and Other Arts

Karate, Its Variants, and Other Arts

In karate and its variants, tsuki is used generally as a part of a compound word for any one of various punches, and virtually never stands alone to describe a discrete technique. (Note that in a compound word, where tsuki does not come first, its pronunciation and writing changes slightly due to rendaku; this is transliterated as zuki.)

Some examples of use for basic techniques include:

  • Age-tsuki (上げ突き), rising punch
  • Choku-tsuki (直突き), straight punch
  • Gyaku-tsuki (逆突き), punch with the rear arm
  • Kagi-tsuki (鉤突き), hook punch
  • Mawashi-tsuki (回し突き), roundhouse punch
  • Morote-tsuki (双手突き), augmented punch using both hands
  • Oi-tsuki (追い突き), punch with the lead arm (when stepping forward - lunge)
  • Jun-tsuki punch with the lead arm when stationary or moving back/away
  • Tate-tsuki (立て突き), vertical fist punch into the middle of the chest (short-range)
  • Ura-tsuki (裏突き), upside-down fist punch into solar plexus area (short-range)
  • Yama-tsuki (山突き) or Rete-zuki, two-level double punch (combination of ura-zuki and jodan oi zuki)

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Famous quotes containing the word arts:

    I too have arts and sorceries;
    Illusion dwells forever with the wave.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)