An indoor athletic facility is called a gymnasium or gym. The word is a translation of the Greek word "gymnasium." [1] They are frequently found in athletic and fitness facilities as well as in educational facilities' activity and learning areas. Slang for "fitness centre," which is frequently a place for indoor entertainment, Fat Loss gym"
The Art of Decision-Making: Navigating Complexity and Uncertainty
ppt gym.pptx
1. ● An indoor athletic facility is called a gymnasium or gym. The word is a translation of the Greek word "gymnasium." [1] They are
frequently found in athletic and fitness facilities as well as in educational facilities' activity and learning areas. Slang for "fitness
centre," which is frequently a place for indoor entertainment, Fat Loss gym"
Focus Fitness
2. ● may also refer to or encompass nearby outdoor spaces. In Western nations, "gyms" (plural: gymnasia) frequently refer to
locations containing indoor or outdoor courts for sports like basketball, hockey, tennis, boxing, or wrestling, as well as
equipment and machinery for exercising or training for physical growth. In various workout
Gymnasia contraption like free weights, bouncing board, running way, tennis-balls, cricket field, and fencing region are utilized as activities.
In safe climate, outside areas are the most helpful for health.[2] Rec centers were well known in antiquated Greece. Their educational
programs included self-protection, gymnastica medica, or exercise based recuperation to help the wiped out and harmed, and for actual
wellness and sports, from boxing to moving to skipping rope.[3]
Gymnasia likewise had instructors of shrewdness and theory. Local area gymnastic occasions were finished as a feature of the festivals
during different town celebrations. In old Greece there was an expression of scorn, "He can neither swim nor compose." Sooner or later, be
that as it may, Olympic competitors started preparing in structures explicitly intended for them.[4] Local area sports never became as famous
among old Romans as it had among the old Greeks. Rec centers were involved more as a groundwork for military help or passive activities.
During the Roman Domain, the gymnastic craftsmanship was neglected. In obscurity Ages there were blade battling competitions and of
gallantry; and after explosive was developed sword battling started to be supplanted by the game of fencing, as well as schools of knife
battling and wrestling and boxing.[5]
3. Gymnasia contraption like free weights, bouncing board, running way, tennis-balls, cricket field, and fencing region are utilized as activities.
In safe climate, outside areas are the most helpful for health.[2] Rec centers were well known in antiquated Greece. Their educational
programs included self-protection, gymnastica medica, or exercise based recuperation to help the wiped out and harmed, and for actual
wellness and sports, from boxing to moving to skipping rope.[3]
Gymnasia likewise had instructors of shrewdness and theory. Local area gymnastic occasions were finished as a feature of the festivals
during different town celebrations. In old Greece there was an expression of scorn, "He can neither swim nor compose." Sooner or later, be
that as it may, Olympic competitors started preparing in structures explicitly intended for them.[4] Local area sports never became as famous
among old Romans as it had among the old Greeks. Rec centers were involved more as a groundwork for military help or passive activities.
During the Roman Domain, the gymnastic craftsmanship was neglected. In obscurity Ages there were blade battling competitions and of
gallantry; and after explosive was developed sword battling started to be supplanted by the game of fencing, as well as schools of knife
battling and wrestling and boxing.[5]
In the eighteenth hundred years, Salzmann, German minister, opened a rec center in Thuringia showing substantial activities, including
running and swimming. Clias and Volker laid out exercise centers in London, and in 1825, Specialist Charles Beck, a German migrant, laid
out the principal gym in the US. It was found that rec center understudies lose interest in doing
4.
5. doing likewise works out, halfway
because of age. Variety in exercises
included skating, dancing, and swimming.
Some gym activities can be done by 6 to 8-
year-olds while age 16 has been considered
mature enough for boxing and horseback
riding.[6]
In Ancient Greece, the gymnasion
(γυμνάσιον) was a locality for both physical
and intellectual education of young men.
The latter meaning of intellectual education
persisted in Greek, German and other
languages to denote a certain type of school
providing secondary education, the
gymnasium, whereas in English the
meaning of physical education pertained in
the word 'gym'.[7] The Greek word
gymnasium, which means "school for naked
6. exercise," was used to designate a locality for the education of young men, including physical
education (gymnastics, for example, exercise) which was customarily performed naked, as well
as bathing, and studies. For the Greeks, physical education was considered as important as
cognitive learning. Most Greek gymnasia had libraries that for use after relaxing in the
baths.[citation needed]
Nowadays, it represents a common area where people, from all ranges of experience, exercise
and work out their muscles. You can also usually find people doing cardio exercises or pilates.
7.
8. ● European nations, Gymnasium (and related words) can also refer to aThe main
recorded exercise centers date back to quite a long time back in old Persia, where
they were known as zurkhaneh, regions that energized actual wellness. The
bigger Roman Showers frequently had connected wellness offices, the actual
showers in some cases being finished with mosaics of nearby bosses of game.
Exercise centers in Germany were an outgrowth of the Turnplatz,[8] an open air
space for vaulting established by German teacher Friedrich Jahn in 1811[9] and
later advanced by the Turners, a nineteenth-century political and gymnastic
development. The primary American to open a public rec center in the US utilizing
Jahn's model was John Neal of Portland, Maine in 1827.[10] The principal indoor
exercise room in Germany was