Hehe, got me there. Yeah I guess so, but only in the same way a hook is a form, or an uppercut is a form.
Printable View
I don't get mad I get even::D
As we speak 12 of Ashida Kim's sexy azz NinjaB!tches and one big Old Sea Hag have been dispatched to your location armed with their retractable Naginatas and a generous supply of Hanae Mori Perfume, so you prolly gonna need some:
http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2259/...ae39d9cbe0.jpg
the correct Cantonese term would be Mo-Gwoon, but gwoon, or kwoon has become acceptable-not by English speaking people who don't know any better, but by Chinese, as in Buk Sing Gwoon.
I guess it's the same as Gung-Fu being an accepted term for Mo-Suht.
Then again, in English, we use terms like, studio, school, academy,gym, etc.
None of which are really accurate.
Doesn't bother me.
What does bother me is when people say,"Bo-Staff!" agggghhh!:D
tapered? lol
ah, napoleon dynamite has brought us all new laughs for when the geekazoid chimpanzee shows up and starts to tell us all about his skeelz and his upcoming career as a cage fighter!
:p
There are sets that are also not for fighting at all.
Not random drills strung together at all in some cases.
A nei-gong set for instance or a hei-gung (chi kung/qigong) set.
These are not fighting sets, but are sets within some curriculums of kungfu depending on what you're learning.
MK needs to be put down guys....hes gone rabid..
Plus, look at those nipples!
Outstanding!