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What is the Japanese phrase for “art of the horse”?


Can I use ほど in a comparative context, similarly to how I'd use the English word 'like?' (And if not…what can I use?)What's a good word for “offer”, as in “…for offering us eternal life…”?japanese verb for “to surf the internet”What are the Japanese words for MMA terminology?The word for “to host someone”“Uncomfortable” in the physical senseHow do you say 'platform' in Japanese?What's the Japanese equivalent of having a “F**k Buddy”?How would I say 'home state' in Japanese?What is the word for an independent-minded person? What is the opposite of that word?













5















Does bajutsu 馬術 refer to the use of weapons on horseback, or less specifically the art of the horse riding and horsemanship?



I'm trying to work out if bajutsu is the horse equivalent to kyūjutsu 弓術, kenjutsu 剣術 and sōjutsu 槍術.










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    5















    Does bajutsu 馬術 refer to the use of weapons on horseback, or less specifically the art of the horse riding and horsemanship?



    I'm trying to work out if bajutsu is the horse equivalent to kyūjutsu 弓術, kenjutsu 剣術 and sōjutsu 槍術.










    share|improve this question









    New contributor




    gaikokujin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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      5












      5








      5








      Does bajutsu 馬術 refer to the use of weapons on horseback, or less specifically the art of the horse riding and horsemanship?



      I'm trying to work out if bajutsu is the horse equivalent to kyūjutsu 弓術, kenjutsu 剣術 and sōjutsu 槍術.










      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      gaikokujin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.












      Does bajutsu 馬術 refer to the use of weapons on horseback, or less specifically the art of the horse riding and horsemanship?



      I'm trying to work out if bajutsu is the horse equivalent to kyūjutsu 弓術, kenjutsu 剣術 and sōjutsu 槍術.







      words word-requests






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      share|improve this question









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      edited 2 days ago









      Chocolate

      48.6k459122




      48.6k459122






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      asked 2 days ago









      gaikokujingaikokujin

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          2 Answers
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          My dictionary (imiwa on iOS, which I believe inherits from one of the online standard dictionaries) lists 馬術 as the English "equestrian". Meaning, the answer would be the latter of your 2 suppositions.






          share|improve this answer






























            2














            As I understand it from Japanese Wikipedia 馬術 article, it means equestrianism nowadays, but until 1871, only samurai were allowed to train it, and it belonged to the 武芸十八般 (bugei juuhappan), the 18 martial arts originating in China, of which 弓術 (kyuujutsu), 剣術 (kenjutsu) ... also were a part.






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              2 Answers
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              2














              My dictionary (imiwa on iOS, which I believe inherits from one of the online standard dictionaries) lists 馬術 as the English "equestrian". Meaning, the answer would be the latter of your 2 suppositions.






              share|improve this answer



























                2














                My dictionary (imiwa on iOS, which I believe inherits from one of the online standard dictionaries) lists 馬術 as the English "equestrian". Meaning, the answer would be the latter of your 2 suppositions.






                share|improve this answer

























                  2












                  2








                  2







                  My dictionary (imiwa on iOS, which I believe inherits from one of the online standard dictionaries) lists 馬術 as the English "equestrian". Meaning, the answer would be the latter of your 2 suppositions.






                  share|improve this answer













                  My dictionary (imiwa on iOS, which I believe inherits from one of the online standard dictionaries) lists 馬術 as the English "equestrian". Meaning, the answer would be the latter of your 2 suppositions.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 2 days ago









                  Ertai87Ertai87

                  1997




                  1997





















                      2














                      As I understand it from Japanese Wikipedia 馬術 article, it means equestrianism nowadays, but until 1871, only samurai were allowed to train it, and it belonged to the 武芸十八般 (bugei juuhappan), the 18 martial arts originating in China, of which 弓術 (kyuujutsu), 剣術 (kenjutsu) ... also were a part.






                      share|improve this answer



























                        2














                        As I understand it from Japanese Wikipedia 馬術 article, it means equestrianism nowadays, but until 1871, only samurai were allowed to train it, and it belonged to the 武芸十八般 (bugei juuhappan), the 18 martial arts originating in China, of which 弓術 (kyuujutsu), 剣術 (kenjutsu) ... also were a part.






                        share|improve this answer

























                          2












                          2








                          2







                          As I understand it from Japanese Wikipedia 馬術 article, it means equestrianism nowadays, but until 1871, only samurai were allowed to train it, and it belonged to the 武芸十八般 (bugei juuhappan), the 18 martial arts originating in China, of which 弓術 (kyuujutsu), 剣術 (kenjutsu) ... also were a part.






                          share|improve this answer













                          As I understand it from Japanese Wikipedia 馬術 article, it means equestrianism nowadays, but until 1871, only samurai were allowed to train it, and it belonged to the 武芸十八般 (bugei juuhappan), the 18 martial arts originating in China, of which 弓術 (kyuujutsu), 剣術 (kenjutsu) ... also were a part.







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered 2 days ago









                          detewe89detewe89

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