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The Tiger is one of the Five Animals of Southern Chinese martial arts. In many Chinese martial arts, both Northern and Southern and as dissimilar as Hung Gar and T'ai Chi Ch'uan, the names of techniques feature "tiger" imagery. The purpose of imitating the tiger is to develop the very yang qualities of fearlessness and aggression when faced with an opponent.The tiger attacks in a staight line and rarely retreats. It is the strongest of the five shaolin animals In the Chinese martial arts, imagery of the Five Animals (Chinese: äºå½¢æ³; pinyin: wÇxÃngquán; literally Five Forms)âTiger, Crane, Leopard, Snake, and Dragonâappears predominantly in Southern styles (roughly speaking, those that originate south of the Yangtze River) especially those associated with Guangdong and Fujian Provinces. ... Chinese martial arts, often abbreviated as CMA, refers to the enormous variety of martial art styles native to China. ... Hung Gar, also called Hung Kuen, is a southern Chinese martial art associated with the Chinese folk hero Wong Fei-Hung, who was a master of Hung Gar. ... Tai Chi Chuan or Taijiquan (Chinese: 太極拳; pinyin: ; literally supreme ultimate fist), commonly known as Tai Chi, Tai Chi, or Taiji, is a nei chia (internal) Chinese martial art which is known for the claims of health and longevity benefits made by its practitioners and in some... Yang is the one of the two opposing forces in Chinese philosophy, it associates with the bright Sun, represents masculine nature. ...
Tigerkungfu dates back to the time of Dr. Hua T'o and constituted some of the original kungfu exercises taught for health.
Among the Shaolin, tiger was a necessity for study because it encompassed all aspects of armed and unarmed combat.
For the most part, tiger utilizes a hard, external approach to combat that meets force with force and is very likely to maim or kill an opponent because of the nature of the counterattack.
The Tiger is one of the Five Animals of Southern Chinese martial arts.
Jee Sin is said to have taught the tiger, or at least a very early version of it.
The focus of this style is in the hand posture, the "Tiger Claw", in which the wrist is drawn back, the fingers spread as wide as possible and the fingertips held forward to deliver a blow while grasping and twisting.