yoritaoshi |
abisetaoshi |
In sumo|lang=en terms the difference between yoritaoshi and abisetaoshi
is that
yoritaoshi is (sumo) a kimarite in which, during a yorikiri attack, the opponent collapses to the floor while
abisetaoshi is (sumo) a kimarite in which the attacker forces his opponent over backwards by throwing his weight into him from a grappling position.
As nouns the difference between yoritaoshi and abisetaoshi
is that
yoritaoshi is (sumo) a kimarite in which, during a yorikiri attack, the opponent collapses to the floor while
abisetaoshi is (sumo) a kimarite in which the attacker forces his opponent over backwards by throwing his weight into him from a grappling position.
oshidashi |
yoritaoshi |
In sumo|lang=en terms the difference between oshidashi and yoritaoshi
is that
oshidashi is (sumo) a kimarite in which the attacker pushes his opponent out of the ring, maintaining hand contact at all times while
yoritaoshi is (sumo) a kimarite in which, during a yorikiri attack, the opponent collapses to the floor.
As nouns the difference between oshidashi and yoritaoshi
is that
oshidashi is (sumo) a kimarite in which the attacker pushes his opponent out of the ring, maintaining hand contact at all times while
yoritaoshi is (sumo) a kimarite in which, during a yorikiri attack, the opponent collapses to the floor.
oshitaoshi |
yoritaoshi |
In lang=en terms the difference between oshitaoshi and yoritaoshi
is that
oshitaoshi is a kimarite in which the attacker pushed his opponent backwards and over while
yoritaoshi is a kimarite in which, during a yorikiri attack, the opponent collapses to the floor.