Open-hand strikes

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Open-hand strikes include various techniques used in the martial arts to attack or defend without curling the hand into a fist. The most famous of these techniques is probably the so-called "karate chop", which is also described as a knife-hand strike (shuto uke) although there are many other techniques.

Some of these are:

  1. techniques that use the edge of the hand closest to the little finger or use the opposite edge of the hand: A knife-hand strike may be delivered along an arc somewhere midway been vertical and horizontal, usually with the aim of numbing an attacker's forearm.
  2. techniques that use the other edge of the hand are more difficult to execute since care has to be taken to position the thumb so that it will not be injured. Performing this move in a way that is powerful will generally involve striking with the palm facing down. And so doing will mean that, e.g., the person using this strike will attack the left side of his opponent's body with the right knife hand, or vice-versa.
  3. spear-hand attacks are performed by keeping the extended fingers tightly compressed together and thrusting directly into some target of relatively small diameter.
  4. the back of the hand, with the fingers loosely curled, can be used in an upward-arcing strike to the groin.
  5. the cupped hands can be used in unison to attack the ears, potentially damaging the opponent's eardrums.
  6. the heel of the hand can be used to strike a target without fear of damaging the knuckles.
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