t'ai chi

NOUN
  1. a Chinese system of slow meditative physical exercise designed for relaxation and balance and health
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Get Started For Free Linguix pencil

How To Use t'ai chi In A Sentence

  • Her mother still holds down her job and has taken up t'ai chi to get involved in sporty things again.
  • Comedy, story-telling, poetry, ceilidhs, workshops and Morris-dancing are on the programme, along with T'ai Chi, crafts, kids' events and even a Sunday morning walk.
  • I started to learn eight of the Eighteen Buddha Palms forms (this is all thill so new to me, so forgive if I mess it up.) and then we did forty minutes of "real" t'ai chi chuan, where I started to learn a Yang-style form, and Bob taught me a little bit about the history of the martial art and the evolution of Chen style into Yang style, with associated legendry. I'm on tape decks all over hell.
  • Today we did a new form, yin yang medical t'ai chi, and then we did a Yang style flow which we had practiced for the past couple of weeks. February 8th, 2009
  • To the reverberations of a taiko drum, they rehearse for combat, with recurring t'ai chi motifs. Times, Sunday Times
  • When a school has a close connection to nature and the elements, it is only natural that it also is the only T'ai Chi school in the world that is teaching aqua T'ai Chi.
  • It has been described as a self-healing art that, like t'ai chi, cultivates the energy force within us and plays an active role in maintaining health. Marc B. Levin: How to Improve Your Health by Moving
  • It has been described as a self-healing art that, like t'ai chi, cultivates the energy force within us and plays an active role in maintaining health. Marc B. Levin: How to Improve Your Health by Moving
  • The soft arts, judo, jujutsu, aikijujutsu, aikido, hapkido and t'ai chi chuan, use a theory of redirection of an attacker's force to deal with an assault instead of the harder arts, which meet force with greater force.
  • Conversely, the poetic imagery, slower pace, and more irregular forms of t'ai chi bespeak a more leisurely, aristocratic development, in which time could be taken and manuscripts kept.
View all
This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy