Full Contact Karate — Most of the time padding and in some cases body armor is used and is the applicable component of karate like many other styles which als..."
2) "Gyms" -- As to kickboxing gyms
gym
Pronunciation: 'jim
Function: noun
1 : GYMNASIUM
2 : PHYSICAL EDUCATION
3 : a usually metal frame supporting an assortment of outdoor play equipment (as a swing, seesaw, and rings) Pronunciation Symbols
Modern indoor gymnasium with pull-down basketball hoops. Gym, a shortened form of gymnasium, refers to facilities intended for indoor sports or exercise. Gyms are sometimes referred to as health clubs.
- 1 Current usage
- 2 Etymology
- 3 History
- 4 Gyms in other Cultures
- 5 See also
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Today the term gymnasium (plural: gymnasiums or gymnasia) is used in the sense of a sports facility. Gyms today are multi-use facilities, offering a range of sporting and physical activities, alongside such things as massages, and other things usually attributed to a health spa.
The word is derived from the Greek word gymnos which means naked. The Greek word gymnasium means "place to be naked" and was used in ancient Greece to designate a locality for the education of young men, including physical education (gymnastics, i.e. exercise) which was customarily performed naked, as well as bathing, and studies. For the Greeks, physical education was considered as important as cognitive learning. Most Greek gymnasia had libraries that could be utilized after relaxing in the baths.
The word "Gymnasium" in Germany refers to the school type which gives you the university entrance qualification (called "Abitur"). So you have four years elementary school ("Grundschule") and then either "Hauptschule" with 5-6 years, "Realschule" with 6 years or "Gymnasium" with 7-8 years depending on the "Bundesland" (state). A gym in the american sense is either a "Fitness-Club" or "Finess-Studio" (commercial facility) or a "Sporthalle" or "Turnhalle" if it is owned by the city or by a school.
Gymnasiums in Germany were an outgrowth of the Turnplatz, an outdoor area for gymnastics, promoted by German educator Friedrich Jahn and the Turners, a nineteenth-century political and gymnastic movement. The first indoor gymnasium in Germany was probably the one built in Hesse in 1852 by Adolph Spiess, an..."
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