Crossword clues for dressage
dressage
- Horse moves long time after groom
- Riding skill is habit that comes with maturity
- Art of training horses
- Time to follow groom? Horse is prepared for it
- Equestrian sport
- Equestrians' competition
- Delicate horsemanship
- Riding activity
- Lippizaner exhibition
- Equine exhibit
- Stable training
- Show of horsemanship
- Red gases (anag)
- One of the Olympic equestrian sports
- Olympic equestrian competition
- Its participants usually have braided manes
- Equine training
- Equestrian showmanship
- Art of horse training
- Equestrian competition
- Equestrian event
- Equestrian training
- Olympic sport that includes passades and pirouettes
- Maneuvers of a horse in response to body signals by the rider
- Olympics event
- Exhibition riding
- Olympic equestrian event
- Horse trainer's method
- Forte of the Vienna Riding School
- Horse guidance
- Form of horsemanship
- Exhibition horsemanship
- Horse-training art
- Groom on time in equestrian event
- Groom ahead of time in equestrian event
- Equestrian discipline is habit coming with time
- Equestrian discipline
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
dressage \dressage\ n. maneuvers of a horse in response to body signals by the rider.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1936, from French dressage, from dresser "to train, drill" (see dress (v.)). Middle English had dress (v.) in the sense of "to train or break in" a horse or other animal (c.1400), but it died out.
Wiktionary
n. 1 (context uncountable English) the schooling of a horse 2 (context uncountable English) an equestrian sport in which the horse and rider perform a test of specific movements in an arena, and are judged on the horse's obedience, acceptance of the bridle and of the rider's aids, gaits, impulsion, and the harmony between horse and rider 3 (context countable English) an event or competition of the sport of dressage
WordNet
n. maneuvers of a horse in response to body signals by the rider
Wikipedia
Dressage ( or ; a French term, most commonly translated to mean "training") is a highly skilled form of riding performed in exhibition and competition, as well as an "art" sometimes pursued solely for the sake of mastery. As an equestrian sport defined by the International Equestrian Federation, dressage is "the highest expression of horse training" where "horse and rider are expected to perform from memory a series of predetermined movements."
Competitions are held at all levels from amateur to the Olympic Games and World Equestrian Games. Its fundamental purpose is to develop, through standardized progressive training methods, a horse's natural athletic ability and willingness to perform, thereby maximizing its potential as a riding horse. At the peak of a dressage horse's gymnastic development, the horse responds smoothly to a skilled rider's minimal aids. The rider is relaxed and appears effort-free while the horse willingly performs the requested movement.
The discipline has a rich history with ancient roots in the writings of Xenophon. Modern dressage has evolved as an important equestrian pursuit since the Renaissance when Federico Grisone's "The Rules of Riding" was published in 1550, the first treatise on equitation in over a thousand years since Xenophon's On Horsemanship. Much about training systems used today reflects practices of classical dressage.
In modern dressage competition, successful training at the various levels is demonstrated through the performance of "tests", prescribed series of movements ridden within a standard arena. Judges evaluate each movement on the basis of an objective standard appropriate to the level of the test and assign each movement a score from zero to ten – zero being "not executed" and 10 being "excellent". A score of 9 is very good and is a high mark, while a competitor achieving all 6s (or 60% overall) should be considering moving on to the next level.
Usage examples of "dressage".
Sirlofty himself was a well-schooled cavalla horse, needing no drill in battle kicks or fancy dressage, but I was green to such things, and learned as much from my mount as I did from Sergeant Duril.
Sirlofty himself was a well-schooled cavalla horse, needing no drill in battle kicks or fancy dressage, but I was green to such things and learned as much from my mount as I did from Sergeant Duril.
Well, I did that, and dressage riding, which is a very gentle sport, and endurance riding, which is not.
Like Patton, von Wangenheim was an Olympian, winner of a gold medal in dressage at the 1936 games in Berlin.
He'd never presume to ride Jaime's Grand Prix dressage mountno one rode Sabre but Jaime, and Carey's less theoretical, more intuitive style of riding would make him a poor match for any upper-level dressage horsebut he'd taken to longeing the horse in a variety of careful exercise programs gleaned from Jaime's books, hoping to keep him decently fit during this long and unplanned layoff.
He'd never presume to ride Jaime's Grand Prix dressage mount—no one rode Sabre but Jaime, and Carey's less theoretical, more intuitive style of riding would make him a poor match for any upper-level dressage horse—but he'd taken to longeing the horse in a variety of careful exercise programs gleaned from Jaime's books, hoping to keep him decently fit during this long and unplanned layoff.
At a pre-arranged place she stopped Dev neatly in front of the judges, saluted, turned her horse, and immediately started the required pattern of dressage exercises which every Olympic competitor performed.
Every day there were novelty events the Army did a display of tent pegging, lady clowns did dressage.