{ ||Ju"jut`su (?), n. Also
Ju"jit`su (?), Jiu"jut`su, Jiu"jit`su (?)
}. [Jap. jūjutsu; jū soft (prob. because no
weapons are used) + jutsu art.] The Japanese art of self-
defense without weapons, now widely used as a system of physical
training. It depends for its efficiency largely upon the principle of
making use of an opponent's strength and weight to disable or injure
him, and by applying pressure so that his opposing movement will throw
him out of balance, dislocate or break a joint, etc. It opposes
knowledge and skill to brute strength, and demands an extensive
practical knowledge of human anatomy.
{ ||Ju"jut`su (?), n. Also
Ju"jit`su (?), Jiu"jut`su, Jiu"jit`su (?)
}. [Jap. jūjutsu; jū soft (prob. because no
weapons are used) + jutsu art.] The Japanese art of self-
defense without weapons, now widely used as a system of physical
training. It depends for its efficiency largely upon the principle of
making use of an opponent's strength and weight to disable or injure
him, and by applying pressure so that his opposing movement will throw
him out of balance, dislocate or break a joint, etc. It opposes
knowledge and skill to brute strength, and demands an extensive
practical knowledge of human anatomy.