The head of a Japanese Dojo is typically addressed as Sensei. He may have other titles, such as Hanshi, but the 'generic' would be Sensei.
dojo means school in Japanese so a dojo is somewhere you learn in America it is common to call a place where you learn a Japanese martial art a dojo
You would teach in a martial arts school. The Japanese would call it a dojo.
dojo
The place to learn karate is called the dojo.
Dojo is a Japanese word which means "the place of the way". It is the training hall where you study.
That will depend on the school or style you are studying. The Japanese word is dojo. Other styles may use the term doha or even temple.
Dojo is the Japanese word for 'a place to learn the way'; Dojang is the Korean word for this and Kwan is the Chinese word.
Basically, you have to get their phone numbers. Then, you have to call them at the appropriate time, and they will stay at the dojo for a rematch indefinitely until you meet them there. If you call all of them at the appropriate times, you can get all gym leaders in the dojo at one time.
Dojo, pronounced dough-joe.
For Japanese and Okinawan styles, training is held in a dojo. For a Korean student, the training is held in a dojang.
"Tatami" in Japanese, is a japanese style flooring that is often used in Japanese homes and "dojo" (training hall). I am in karate so this is why I know some words in Japanese, plus I am taking lessons in the Japanese language.
A martial art school can be called many things, including an academy, gym, or studio. Often times, if the Martial Art is specifically of Asian Martial Art lineage, the term of the native language is used. In Japanese, the term is Dojo, used frequently in many countries around the world for the teaching of Judo, Aikido, Jujutsu, and Japanese Karate-do. In Korea, the term is Dojang, which is the proper term commonly used world wide in Taekwondo, Hapkido, and other Korean Martial Art systems.