A position in which the knuckles of the sword hand are down and the fingernails up.
a rotation of the hand leaving the palm down and the forearm bones parallel.
When your foot rolls outward upon contact with the ground. A rare condition that affects less than one percent of the population. [www.eastbay.com/help/glossary
the act of turning the back of the hand to face posteriorly; verb - supinate.
The rotation of a golfer's wrists during their swing.
External rotation along the long axis of the foot (between the second and third metatarsal). A complex combination of adduction, inversion and plantarflexion. Supination may be regarded as a weightbearing “rolling out†of either the rearfoot or midfoot, or both.
Movement of the forearm so that the palm is turned forward or upward.
movement of the forearm in which the palm of the hand is turned anteriorly or superiorly
A turning of the hand so that the palm faces upward. The opposition of pronation.
The outward rolling of the foot while walking. The opposite of overpronation.
Moving the forearm into a palm-up position.
The movement of the forearm so that the hand rests palm up on a surface.
Coordinated triplane motion of the foot which involves three planes of motion: adduction, inversion and plantarflexion
The rolling of the foot outward to the side while running or walking, can lead to serious injury To Top
rotation of forearm and hand so that palm faces forward or upward, and corresponding rotation of lower leg and foot
movement of the forearm from a palms-down to a palms-up position.
rotation of the hands and forearms so that the palms face upward
the motion of turning of the palm of the hand so that it faces upward
Rotation of the hand and forearm so that the palm faces forwards or upwards and the thumb faces outwards.
Rotating forearm palm down.
Palms and forearm facing upward.
Rotation of the forearm with the palm facing towards the ceiling
A description of an anatomical movement - specifically turning the palm of the hand upwards.
The position of the hand with the palm facing up.
The action of rotating the forearm outward so that the hand is palm up.
Upward rotation of a limb, usually the hand or forearm, in an opened position.
The turning or rotation of the wrist, resulting in the palm of the hand facing upward.
The reverse of pronation.
This is a rather complex three dimensional movement of the foot and ankle. It involves the turning inward of the sole of the foot (inversion) and a movement toward the midline of the body (adduction). Most people exhibit some amount of supination in the standing state and the beginning of a running stride. In your video analysis you look only at a simplified two dimensional representation of this movement in the form of the angle that can be drawn between the leg, the ankle, and the heel of the foot. This angle is related to a "natural" or calibration angle of this complex at a normal standing state. Supination is usually expressed as a positive angle relative to the calibration angle.
The opposite of pronation. It's an outward rolling of the forefoot that naturally occurs during the stride cycle at toe-off. Oversupination occurs when the foot remains on its outside edge after heel strike instead of pronating. A true oversupinating foot underpronates or does not pronate at all, so it doesn't absorb shock well. It is a rare condition occurring in less than 1 percent of the running population.
Foot - inversion combined with adduction of the forefoot. Forearm - rotation of the wrist and hand laterally.
means lying face upwards and in clubfoot refers to the position of the hindfoot.
Rotating a hand or foot outward on its long axis. The movement is done with the muscles in the forearm or lower leg.
hand position whereby the palm faces upwards (e.g. sixte) - in modern fencing the palm in more likely to be in a vertical plane.
Supination of the forearm is rolling the hands outward towards palms facing up. Supination of the ankle is rolling the foot outward to place pressure on the outside of the foot.
A term made popular by Ben Hogan referring to the rotation and angling of the right wrist during the golf swing.
Refers to the position of the hand with fingers facing up.
su-pi-nation to turn or rotate (the foot) by adduction and inversion so that the outer edge of the sole bears the body's weight.
the position of the sword hand with the finger-nail uppermost
The rotation of the wrist so that the palm of the hand faces upward.
The opposite of Pronation. It describes the position of the foot when it's pointed up. The inner side is tilted higher than the outer side. It also describes the process by which the weight is shifted from the inner side of the foot to the outer side. When the foot pushes off the ground on its way up, weight is mostly on the big tow (the inner side of the foot).
(hand in supination) Gripping the sword with knuckles down and palm up, hand in quarta (fourth)
Foot strike where the runner puts most of their weight to the outer side of the shoe.
Rolling motion to the outside of the foot while standing
turning upward (the opposite of pronation).
Movement of the forearm into a palm-up position.
Supination is the rotation of the forearm so that the palm faces anteriorly, or palm facing up.