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- Chin_Na abstract "Chin na or Qinna (擒拿) is the set of joint lock techniques used in the Chinese martial arts to control or lock an opponent's joints or muscles/tendons so he cannot move, thus neutralizing the opponent's fighting ability. Chin na su (Chinese: 術; pinyin: shù meaning technique) literally translates as technique of catching and locking in Chinese. Some schools simply use the word na to describe the techniques. Chin Na features both standing and ground based grappling techniques.Some Chinese martial arts instructors focus more on their Chin Na techniques than others. This is one of the many reasons why the Chin Na of one school may differ from that of another. All martial arts contain Chin Na techniques in some degree. The southern Chinese martial arts have more developed Chin Na techniques than northern Chinese martial systems. The southern martial arts have much more prevalent reliance on hand techniques which causes the practitioner to be in closer range to their opponent. There are over 700 Chin Na traditional techniques found in all martial arts. In the Non-Temple White Crane style there are 150-200 Chin Na techniques alone. Along with Fujian White Crane, styles such as Northern Eagle Claw (Ying Jow Pai) and Tiger Claw (Fu Jow Pai) have Chin Na as their martial focus and tend to rely on these advanced techniques.Since Chinese culture has influenced countries like Japan and Korea, Chinese martial arts has influenced their indigenous styles as well. For example: Jujutsu, Judo and Aikido were developed in Japan; and Hapkido founded later in Korea, these had developed their joint locking techniques from Chinese martial arts. One can see that many original Chinese Chin Na techniques resemble those found in other grappling based arts such as Brazilian jiu-jitsu. Depending on the school and instructor, Chin Na is assembled in different ways. Some Chin Na systems resemble Brazilian jiu-jitsu due to their focus on ground grappling. Another may be more similar to Judo due to their focus on standing Rou Dao (the soft techniques of Chin Na). The next school may appear more like Aikido or Hapkido due to their focus on wrist and small joint locks.There is no universally accepted systemized form of Chin Na. Instead, each school varies due to the instructor's training and/or personal preference of focus.".
- Chin_Na wikiPageExternalLink tech3.html.
- Chin_Na wikiPageExternalLink shaolin-chin-na.htm.
- Chin_Na wikiPageExternalLink chin_na.php.
- Chin_Na wikiPageID "324179".
- Chin_Na wikiPageID "32854269".
- Chin_Na wikiPageLength "21".
- Chin_Na wikiPageLength "6184".
- Chin_Na wikiPageOutDegree "1".
- Chin_Na wikiPageOutDegree "30".
- Chin_Na wikiPageRedirects Chin_Na.
- Chin_Na wikiPageRevisionID "446514727".
- Chin_Na wikiPageRevisionID "706544807".
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Aikido.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Category:Chinese_martial_arts.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Category:Chinese_martial_arts_terms.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Category:Joint_locks.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Chin_Na.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_martial_arts.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Eagle_Claw.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Fu_Jow_Pai.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Fujian_White_Crane.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Grappling.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Hapkido.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Hung_Ga.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Joint_lock.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Judo.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Jujutsu.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Martial_arts.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Northern_Praying_Mantis.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Qigong.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Shuai_jiao.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Southern_Praying_Mantis.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Touch_of_Death.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Traditional_Chinese_medicine.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Tui_na.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:拿.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:擒.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:術.
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ch'in Na".
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLinkText "Chin Na".
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLinkText "Grabbing Hand".
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLinkText "Locking Hands".
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLinkText "chin na".
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLinkText "joint manipulation".
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLinkText "locking maneuvers".
- Chin_Na wikiPageWikiLinkText "qinna".
- Chin_Na c "擒拿".
- Chin_Na p "qínná".
- Chin_Na p "shù".
- Chin_Na t Wikt:術.
- Chin_Na w "ch'in2 na2".
- Chin_Na wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:ChineseText.
- Chin_Na wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Chinese_martial_arts.
- Chin_Na wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Grappling.
- Chin_Na wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_martial_art_term.
- Chin_Na wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:More_footnotes.
- Chin_Na wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Chin_Na wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Zh.
- Chin_Na subject Category:Chinese_martial_arts.
- Chin_Na subject Category:Chinese_martial_arts_terms.
- Chin_Na subject Category:Joint_locks.
- Chin_Na hypernym Set.
- Chin_Na type Art.
- Chin_Na type Redirect.
- Chin_Na type Term.
- Chin_Na comment "Chin na or Qinna (擒拿) is the set of joint lock techniques used in the Chinese martial arts to control or lock an opponent's joints or muscles/tendons so he cannot move, thus neutralizing the opponent's fighting ability. Chin na su (Chinese: 術; pinyin: shù meaning technique) literally translates as technique of catching and locking in Chinese. Some schools simply use the word na to describe the techniques.".
- Chin_Na label "Ch'in Na".
- Chin_Na label "Chin Na".
- Chin_Na sameAs Q2165641.
- Chin_Na sameAs Chin_Na.
- Chin_Na sameAs Chin_Na.
- Chin_Na sameAs Chin_Na.
- Chin_Na sameAs Qinna.
- Chin_Na sameAs Qinna.
- Chin_Na sameAs 擒拿.
- Chin_Na sameAs Chin_na.
- Chin_Na sameAs Qinna.
- Chin_Na sameAs Qinna.
- Chin_Na sameAs m.01vywf.
- Chin_Na sameAs Цинь_на.
- Chin_Na sameAs Q2165641.
- Chin_Na wasDerivedFrom Chin_Na?oldid=446514727.
- Chin_Na wasDerivedFrom Chin_Na?oldid=706544807.
- Chin_Na isPrimaryTopicOf Chin_Na.