Appledog wrote:rojcewiczj wrote:Chen Zhonghua has spoken of this "line" as a demarcation from wince we separate yin and yang.
Actually I am not sure I understand what you are talking about. A wince is a slight involuntary grimmace.
Appledog wrote:rojcewiczj wrote:Chen Zhonghua has spoken of this "line" as a demarcation from wince we separate yin and yang.
Actually I am not sure I understand what you are talking about. A wince is a slight involuntary grimmace:
wince
verb
1. make a slight involuntary grimace or shrinking movement of the body out of pain or distress.
"he winced at the disgust in her voice"
synonyms: grimace, pull a face
If you meant to say "whence", then you have committed a serious grammatical error that (at least according to one webpage I checked) Nazis have been attacking since the 13th century (ref: http://www.todayifoundout.com/index.php ... correctly/). Your sentence should read, "Chen Zhonghua has spoken of this "line" as a demarcation whence we separate yin and yang.". Actually in order to make it read better and use proper typography, because we care about such things, you should remove the rather banal emphasis quotes and replace it with italicized text, as follows:
Chen Zhonghua has spoken of this line as a demarcation whence we separate yin and yang.
Actually now that I have switched around what you said to fit my own view of things, it makes more sense. Carry on.
LaoDan wrote:I have addressed some aspects of “this line as a demarcation from which we separate yin and yang” in Taijiquan in the following article:
http://slantedflying.com/be-the-ball/
LaoDan wrote:While the whole body does make one sphere, there should be an infinite number of possible additional spheres; there should be yin and yang on each side of every point of contact (i.e. separate spheres).
Return to Xingyiquan - Baguazhang - Taijiquan
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 93 guests