jūdōgi
See also: judogi
English
Noun
jūdōgi (plural jūdōgi)
- Alternative form of judogi.
- 2002, David Waterhouse, “Buddhism and the Teaching of Jūdō”, in Victor Sōgen Hori, Richard P. Hayes, James Mark Shields, editors, Teaching Buddhism in the West: From the Wheel to the Web (Curzon Critical Studies in Buddhism), London; New York, N.Y.: RoutledgeCurzon, →ISBN, “Buddha Body, Buddha Mind” section, page 134:
- (b) Dōjō syllabus (important technical terms in italics) 1. dōjō etiquette; jūdōgi and how to wear it; ukemi (rear and side); ippon-seoinage; kesagatame
- 2009, Filip Swennen, “Karategi: from casual wear to a uniform”, in The Evolution of Karate: From Secret Martial Art to Worldwide Cultural Sport[1] (thesis), Katsuura, Chiba: International Budo University, archived from the original on 13 October 2017, chapter 6 (Clothing, belts and ranks), section 1 (Karate uniform, black and colored belts), page 58:
- These first white karategi were based on the Japanese jūdōgi(柔道着).
- 2019, Gianluca Antonucci, Armando Della Porta, Michelina Venditti, “The Value of the Elite Athlete as Influencer in the Era of Social Media”, in Massimo Sargiacomo, editor, Proceedings of the 10th European Conference on Intangibles and Intellectual Capital, […], Reading, Berkshire: Academic Conferences and Publishing International, →ISBN, page 29:
- As mentioned above, Basile was the one with the greatest difference between people recognising him by the image and the ones who did once the name was revealed. Investigating the reasons we found that many respondents actually knew him by the TV shows in which he participated (most of the respondents could quote VIP Big Brother) and rarely saw him wearing a jūdōgi.
Japanese
Romanization
jūdōgi