Eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth, his testicles for your testicles. Seems fair to me. No one should kick anyone in the groin except for extreme purposes (self defense, rape). But if he kicked you first, especially just for a laugh or to embarrass you, then definitely kick him back; that is if you are still standing. Make sure not to miss.
Spread your legs slightly apart. Lift one foot into hand; holding in front of body. While maintaining balance. With foot in hand throw or kick hard off the hand towards the groin. Now you have just kicked yourself in the groin.
Put ice on it and that will help. The way you wrote the question is that the kick was on purpose by your mother. If this is true, then, it is abuse and you need to call social services.
I, we, they, you kick. He, she, it kicks.
Lol well I'm sure if you kicked a grizzly your first thought should be "Get the hell up out of there!" or maybe "Why did I do that?".
just raise your leg and strike at the groin with the bottom of your leg. drive the knee of your kicking leg foward. the groin kick is effective
I/We/You/They have kicked He/She/It has kicked
They actually kicked him out before the first album came out in 1982.
no. If the instructor wanted to do that he should have let the girl kick him himself
The word 'kicked' is not a noun.The word 'kicked' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to kick. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:He kicked the ball as hard as he could. (verb)The kicked ball flew over the trees and out of sight. (adjective).The word 'kick' is both a noun (kick, kicks) and a verb (kick, kicks, kicking, kicked).
Kicked is the past tense of kick.
The word 'kicked' is not a noun.The word 'kicked' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to kick. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:He kicked the ball as hard as he could. (verb)The kicked ball flew over the trees and out of sight. (adjective).The word 'kick' is both a noun (kick, kicks) and a verb (kick, kicks, kicking, kicked).
The verb "kick" has the following tenses: Present: kick/kicks Past: kicked Present participle: kicking Past participle: kicked