Crossword clues for kendo
kendo
- Sport using bamboo swords
- Sport descended from samurai training
- Samurai's martial art
- Samurai sword training
- Martial art with swords
- Martial art with armor
- Martial art whose practitioners wear bogu
- Martial art whose name means, literally, "sword way"
- Japanese swordplay using bamboo staves
- Japanese swordplay
- Japanese sword fighting
- Japanese martial art using split bamboo swords
- Japanese martial art using bamboo swords
- Japanese fencing sport
- Fencing with wooden swords
- Fencing with bamboo swords
- Fencing with bamboo staves
- Fencing sport with bamboo swords
- Art inspired by the samurai
- Japanese martial art with bamboo swords
- "Way of the sword" sport
- Japanese form of fencing
- Sport with a bamboo sword
- Japanese sword sport
- Martial art whose name means "sword way"
- Martial art using split bamboo swords
- Martial art to finish in decisive outcome
- End in knockout? It might!
- Fencing OK to be put up round border
- Japanese fencing style
- Japanese fencing with bamboo swords
- Japanese art, complete with fine raised frame
- Understand and then perform Japanese martial art
- Sport with bamboo swords
- Martial art with bamboo swords
- Sport with bamboo weapons
- Sport with bamboo sticks
- Sport with a weapon called a shinai
Wiktionary
n. a Japanese martial art using "swords" of split bamboo.
Wikipedia
is a modern Japanese martial art, which descended from swordsmanship ( kenjutsu) and uses bamboo swords ( shinai) and protective armour ( bōgu). Today, it is widely practiced within Japan and many other nations across the world.
Kendo is an activity that combines martial arts practices and values with strenuous sport-like physical activity.
Usage examples of "kendo".
I am menkyo kaiden there and a yudansha in Yanagi-ryu jujutsu and kendo.
In the four months Antryg had Lived in Los Angeles, he had been able to keep up sword practice at a dojo in Burbank operated by a black kendo sandan and an old Japanese gentleman who taught iaido to those who understood and preferred that somewhat more esoteric art.
Blade had also used his knowledge of kendo and singlestick fighting to work out ways of using the swords as clubs.
And then a lesson in kendo leapt into his mind and, remembering Musashi's Red Leaves Cut, he set his spirit toward gaining control of Kenzo's stick.
In the four months Antryg had Lived in Los Angeles, he had been able to keep up sword practice at a dojo in Burbank operated by a black kendo sandan and an old Japanese gentleman who taught iaido to those who understood and preferred that somewhat more esoteric art.
Finally, he stepped into the hakama, the traditional black divided skirt worn now only by those who had mastered kendo, kyudo, sumo or held dan—black belt—ranking in aikido.
Finally, he stepped into the hakama, the traditional black divided skirt worn now only by those who had mastered kendo, kyudo, sumo or held dan-black belt-ranking in aikido.