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Posted

Hi all! I'm a first kyu in Shoalin Kenpo karate, and have long been wondering what the "real terms" for the kyu/dan ranks are. When I say "real terms", I mean in the Japanese or Chinese language, I'm honestly not sure which. I've felt this is a gap in my knowledge of the art, and would be grateful if someone could help me out. Thanks!

"Show me, don't tell me" ~Unknown

"Wearing a (insert belt color here) does not mean you are invincible, it means you never gave up, worked past the pain, overcame the disappointments, didn't cave into your doubts, faced your fears, and learned enough to know how little you really know."

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Posted

I can't speak for the Chinese systems, but in Japanese terminology you are an Ikkyu. Before that you were a Nikyu, and before that a Sankyu, and I think you get the idea after that. It's often just the number and "kyu." Similarly, when you get a black belt you are a Shodan. Afterwards you become a Nidan, then a Sandan, and so on. What your system uses will depend on whether or not they use Chinese or Japanese.

Martial arts training is 30% classroom training, 70% solo training.


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Posted

Well for the kyu grades it is the number then followed by kyu (Ikkyu, Nikyu, Sankyu etc).

Dan grades Shodan, Nidan, Sandan etc.

  • 1 month later...
Posted
Hi all! I'm a first kyu in Shoalin Kenpo karate, and have long been wondering what the "real terms" for the kyu/dan ranks are. When I say "real terms", I mean in the Japanese or Chinese language, I'm honestly not sure which. I've felt this is a gap in my knowledge of the art, and would be grateful if someone could help me out. Thanks!

Hachikyu, Shechikyu, Rokkyu, Gokyu, Yonkyu, Sankyu, Nikyu, Ikkyu, Shodan, Nidan, Sandan, Yondan, Godan, Rokudan, Nanadan, Hachidan, Kudan/Kyudan, Judan.

The person who succeeds is not the one who holds back, fearing failure, nor the one who never fails-but the one who moves on in spite of failure.

Charles R. Swindoll

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