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support footの例文

例文モバイル版携帯版

  • In brief descriptions of dance figures, " replace " means replacing the weight to the previous support foot while keeping it in place.
  • This is a community that prefers the nonpolluting to the high-powered, likes to preserve as well as develop, and enthusiastically supports foot-powered activities of all sorts.
  • The early clunky-but-comfortable shoes from Europe had arch-support foot beds, a la Birkenstock, but heavy, luggy one-piece soles that Sabrina-heeled American women couldn't stand.
  • It is also called "'support foot "', a foot which bears the full or nearly full weight at the beginning of a step or while the other foot does some action ( tap, ronde, etc . ).
  • After training, all police dog teams are able to track and find wanted offenders or missing persons, search all types of buildings, detect illicit drugs, and support foot-patrolling of public places to deter crime and make these places safer for the community.
  • In descriptions of the footwork of step patterns the abbreviation "'NFR "'stands for "'no foot rise "'and means that the heel of the support foot remains in contact with the floor until the weight is transferred onto the other foot.
  • "' No foot rise "': In descriptions of the footwork of step patterns it is abbreviated as "'NFR "'and means that the heel of the support foot remains in contact with the floor until the weight is transferred onto the other foot.
  • In some dance moves, such as ball change, the force produced by pushing with the new supporting foot at the moment of the partial weight transfer makes it possible to lift the previous support foot for a short time, followed by the drop back onto the first supporting foot subject to the gravity force.