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History of osu! Records of osu!'s history, all in the osu! wiki. 2007 Initial game build 2008 osu!taiko, osu!catch, more mods, and major improvements 2009 osu! iPhone, new multiplayer modes, kudosu system 2010 Wai-con 2010 2011 osu! wiki 2012 Five years of osu!, osu!mania, widescreen support...
- Online Rankings History
Online rankings history. Early versions of osu! were a...
- Day Jokes · Wiki
There was also a report at the time of Ephemeral jokingly...
- Bahasa Indonesia
Sejarah osu! Catatan sejarah osu!, dapat diakses semua di...
- OSU
Also, the osu! wiki now has 5 admins (Loctav and deadbeat...
- Online Rankings History
4. Finally, the Kyokushin Karate version states that Osu is a contraction of two words, from a longer phrase known as “Osu no Seishin”. The verb ‘osu’ which means “push”, and ‘shinobu’ which means “to endure”. 押し Oshi meaning “Push” 忍ぶ Shinobu meaning “to Endure”.
Herbert had experience creating video games prior to Osu!, having made some during high school and university, [15]: 05:34 but has said he did not think it would become his job. [16]: 00:20 He began developing Osu! while attending university and had a working build of the game after a few hours, which he shared with friends.
Strength of character that develops through hard training is known as “Osu no Seishin” (Spirit of Osu). 4. Finally, the Kyokushin Karate version states that Osu is a contraction of two words, from a longer phrase known as “Osu no Seishin”. The verb ‘osu’ which means “push”, and ‘shinobu’ which means “to endure”.
- The History & Origins of “Osu!”
- The Kyokushin Theory
- The ‘Good Morning’ Theory
- The Onegaishimasu Theory
- When You Should Never Use “Osu!”/”Oss!”
- “But Jesse-San, What Should I Say instead?”
According to history books, the expression “Osu!” first appeared in the Officers Academy of the Imperial Japanese Navy, in the early 20thcentury. This fact, combined with the fact that “Osu!” is non-existent in traditional Karate dojos of Okinawa (read more about that here), tells us two things: 1. The term did not originate in the birthplace of Ka...
The first theory comes from Japanese full-contact Kyokushin Karate. You see, in Kyokushin it’s common wisdom that the term “Osu!” stems from a longer phrase known as “Osu no Seishin”. In this particular case, “Osu!” is a combination of two different kanji (Sino-Japanese characters), namely the verb ‘osu’ which means “to push”, and ‘shinobu’ which m...
The next theory comes from Dr. Mizutani Osamu in Japan. Dr. Mizutani, a linguistics professor at the University of Nagoya and frequently quoted in The Japan Times as a “language expert”, talks in his work about a fascinating experiment he once conducted with a group of random people in order to observe the various ways in which subjects would retur...
This last theory is called ‘The Onegaishimasu Theory’. It’s similar to the previous ‘Good Morning Theory’ in the sense that a longer (formal) Japanese expression gets shortened to a more pragmatic (but less respectful) version. In this case, the original phrase is “Onegaishimasu”, a word that most Karate practitioners have surely heard, or perhaps ...
Okay… With the history lesson out of the way, let’s finish off with a bang. Although the usage of “Osu!”has reached embarassing heights in modern Karate today (including some MMA and BJJ gyms), people are bound to keep using it because of its newfound meaning in martial arts circles as a handy, all-encompassing utility word. That’s fine. You should...
Okay. So what should you say instead? In 9 times out of 10, there are two very good options: 1. Say “Hai!”… 2. …or say nothing. “Hai!” is the commonly used word in Japanese for “yes”/”understood”/”affirmative”. That’s what we say in Okinawa – the birthplace of Karate – as well as in many other places where the“Osu!” parade hasn’t arrived yet and pe...
Also, the "osu!" in the original title is written as 押忍 (ossu) and has the kanji for 押 meaning "to push" (AKA click (the circles)) and 忍 meaning "endure" or "spy", and is the "nin" part of "ninja". (So the title is sort of a pun because you have to click, or in Japanese "押す (osu)", the circles to the beat)
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Jul 30, 2021 · Created in Okinawa 700 years ago, the martial art was first called toudi or ‘Chinese hand’ In the 20th century, to skirt anti-Chinese sentiment and to help its spread in Japan, the name was ...