some japanese arts are: the kimono, the haiku, the japanese fan, the japanese painting, the kinji, japanese pottery, japanese origomi, japanese comics, and architecture.
Only Japanese arts were allowed.
There are Japanese martial arts. There are individuals that practice them. It would be a stereotype to think that all Japanese practice martial arts. The actual percentage is pretty small and probably is about the same as in the US.
Kung Fu is Chinese, a lot of people mistake it for being Japanese because Japan once colonized China.
Japanese people play every mainstream sport that the rest of the world play. they have there own traditional sports such as sumo wrestling and martial arts fighting but are also fond of baseball and soccer
yes if i know what your talkin about
tai quan doe
karateka
I think the Japanese are no different than anyone else. They train in a wide variety of martial arts. From Wikipedia we have - Japanese martial arts refers to the enormous variety of Martial Arts native to Japan. At least three Japanese terms are often used interchangeably with the English phrase "Japanese martial arts": , literally meaning "martial way."However, there are martial arts with other origins such as one of the largest Krav Maga training sites in the world. Sometimes a local will want to do something no one else is doing because somehow it seems more mysterious and everyone else isn't doing it. The other factor is where do the instructors come from. If a particular art has a lot of students, there will eventually be more instructors and sites where people can train.
"Sensei" means 'one who has gone before' and is usually associated with a teacher or mentor. You can call a martial arts instructor 'sensei' in Japanese.
nature gave spinach to japan when it was in trouble. This miracle vegetaion was then consumed to make the Japanese people into super heroes!
Some Japanese fish, do martial arts, play games, eat, that sort of stuff.