• Keep up to date with Ausbb via Twitter and Facebook. Please add us!
  • Join the Ausbb - Australian BodyBuilding forum

    If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.

    The Ausbb - Australian BodyBuilding forum is dedicated to no nonsense muscle and strength building. If you need advice that works, you have come to the right place. This forum focuses on building strength and muscle using the basics. You will also find that the Ausbb- Australian Bodybuilding Forum stresses encouragement and respect. Trolls and name calling are not allowed here. No matter what your personal goals are, you will be given effective advice that produces results.

    Please consider registering. It takes 30 seconds, and will allow you to get the most out of the forum.

[Article] Bodybuilding Terminology

B

biftek

Guest
BASIC EXERCISE
An established lift that can be performed with free weights or a commonly used machine. Basic exercises include squats, bench presses, military presses and leg curls.

BURNS
Short, quick partial reps performed at the end of a full-rep set to take muscles beyond failure

CHEATING
To utilise looser form in order to perform additional reps. This technique should be used only in a limited fashion after achieving failure with full reps in good form.

CIRCUIT TRAINING
A workout methodology used to boost overall conditioning. One set for a bodypart is followed immediately by one set for another bodypart until several (or all) bodyparts are stressed in the same workout.

COMPOUND EXERCISE
A lift that stresses two or more bodyparts. For example, bench presses are a compound lift because they stress the chest (pectorals), shoulders (front deltoids) and upper arms (triceps).

COMPOUND EXERCISE
To flex a muscle throughout a lift in order to focus perpetual pressure on it.

CYCLE
A period of time dedicated to a specific training strategy. For example, a bodybuilder may perform a "heavy cycle" of low-rep training for eight weeks. See also "periodisation".

DESCENDING SET
(a.k.a. drop set) | Progressively lighter sets of the same exercise. For example, you may do barbell curls with 100 pounds, followed immediately by 80-pound barbell curls and then 60-pound barbell curls. In this manner, you boost intensity and pump out many more reps than you could have with only 100 pounds.

DOUBLE SPLIT
To train twice per day. Double splitting is typically done by competitors in precontest mode.

FAILURE
The point at which no additional full-range repetitions can be performed in the same manner. A trainer can go beyond failure by changing the parameters of the reps through such techniques as cheating, forced reps or partial reps.

FORCED REPS
To perform additional repetitions with assistance after reaching unassisted failure. Spotter(s) should help only enough to keep the weight moving.

GIANT SET
Four or more different exercises for one bodypart performed back-to-back without resting.

HEAVY
Low-rep training. This term is generally applied to maximum sets of six reps or fewer, and it is relative dependent on your strength level. Six hundred pounds is not heavy to a trainer who can deadlift it 10 times, but 300 pounds is heavy to a trainer who can lift it only five times.

HIGH-INTENSITY TRAINING
(a.k.a. HIT or Heavy Duty training) | An exercise philosophy that prescribes pushing most working sets to full-rep failure or beyond. HIT also calls for low-volume workouts and a low workout frequency.

HIGH-LOW TRAINING

To alternate high-rep sets and low-rep sets of the same exercise.

INTENSITY

A workout's degree of difficulty, influenced primarily by effort, pace and weight resistance. Typically, the more intense a workout is, the more sets are pushed to failure or beyond.

ISOLATION EXERCISE
A lift that stresses only one bodypart. For example, dumbbell flyes are an isolation exercise because they work only the chest, and leg extensions work only the quads.

ISO-TENSION
To flex a muscle hard and hold it for a few seconds as part of a training strategy.

MUSCLE CONFUSION
To continually alter workouts in order to discourage the muscles from becoming accustomed to a pattern of exercises, sets and reps.

NEGATIVE

Predominantly,the lowering of a weight during a repetition. When performing negative (a.k.a. eccentric) reps, you receive assistance in raising the weight and then resist gravity when slowly lowering it, thus stressing muscles only during the negative portion.

OVERTRAINING
Performing a greater volume and/or intensity of work than you are capable of recovering from. Overtraining leads to stagnation, lethargy and, eventually, muscle loss.

PARTIAL REPS
Repetitions performed through a less-than-full range of motion. Partial reps can be done after achieving failure with full reps in order to extend a set. You can also perform partials to focus on a specific area of a lift. For example, top deadlifts apply most of the stress to your trapezius and upper back and boost your strength for full-range deadlifts.

PEAK CONTRACTON
The pausing and flexing at the midpoint of a rep to increase muscle stress.

PERIODISATION
A process of alternating cycles of weight training. For example, a bodybuilder may do four weeks of low-rep training (heavy cycle) followed by two weeks of high-rep training (light cycle).

PLATEAU
A training impasse. You reach a plateau when you cannot increase the weight or reps for an exercise after a certain period of time. For example, if you can get six reps with 225 pounds for bent barbell rows, but over the course of four weeks or more you can't get seven reps with that poundage, you have hit a plateau for that exercise. The term can also apply to your entire programme — if you have stopped making noticeable progress for weeks or months, your efforts have plateaued and need to be analysed and altered.

POSITIVE
Predominantly, the raising of a weight during a repetition.

PRE-EXHAUST
To perform an isolation exercise before a compound exercise for the same bodypart. Utilising this technique, you stress the targeted muscle first and thus make the compound lift also focus more on that targeted muscle. For example, by doing flyes (an isolation lift) before bench presses (a compound lift), your pec strength is diminished before beginning bench presses, thus during that exercise the pec muscles reach failure — the whole point of bench presses — before the fresh front delts and triceps.

PRIORITISE
To place a greater training emphasis on a specific bodypart or exercise. Someone with lagging calves may prioritise them by training them first during every other workout or increasing the training frequency for that particular bodypart.

PYRAMIDING
To utilise greater weights for lower reps for each subsequent set of an exercise. For example, a pyramid may consist of 12 reps with 135 pounds, 10 with 185, eight with 205 and six with 225. Pyramids can also be descending.

QUALITY TRAINING
The principleof reducing rest intervals between sets over time. This is often done to improve conditioning for a bodybuilding competition.

REST-PAUSE TRAINING
To rest briefly after reaching failure in order to perform additional repetitions.

REVERSE GRIP
A grip contrary to the most accepted manner. For example, reverse-grip bench presses are done with an underhand grip, as opposed to the traditional overhand grip.

STAGGERED SETS
Sets for a bodypart done throughout a workout for another. Staggered sets are typically reserved for calves or abdominals. For example, you could perform one set of a calf exercise for every three sets of an exercise for another bodypart.

STATIC CONTRACTION
To hold your flexed muscle(s) still against resistance. For example, after reaching failure during a set of barbell curls, you can further tax your biceps by holding the weight up and steady for as long as possible.

STICKING POINT
Part of a lift that is difficult to get past in order to complete the movement. If you stall just before locking out a bench press, that is your sticking point.

SUPERSETS
Two different exercises performed back-to-back without resting between them.

TRISETS
Three different exercises performed back-to-back without resting between them.

VOLUME
The quantity of sets and reps performed in a workout.

WORKING SET
A maximum set, as opposed to a warm-up set or the initial sets of an ascending pyramid. Some trainers count only the final one or two sets of an exercise (where they use maximum poundage) as working sets, as the preceding sets were performed in anticipation of maximum intensity in the final one(s).
 
Bodybuildin Jargon

Heres some more.


[SIZE=+1]Bitch Tits:[/SIZE]
A condition in which femaile like breast development occurs in a bodybuilder, also called Gynecomastia.
[SIZE=+1]Bulking Up:[/SIZE]
Gaining bodyweight by adding both fat & muscle, a once common practice no longer in vogue among knowledgeable bodybuilders.
[SIZE=+1]Burn:[/SIZE]
The burning sensation in a muscle that comes from the lactic acid and pH buildup resulting from exercising the muscle to failure.
[SIZE=+1]Cap:[/SIZE]
The deltoid muscle of the shoulder, which can be divided into front, middle and rear heads for training.
[SIZE=+1]Cheat Reps:[/SIZE]
When muscle fatigue begins to set in or the weight is too heavy, some athletes employ body English or 'improper' form to make the lift, using surrounding muscle groups or even momentum to assist in the movement.
[SIZE=+1]Close Sport:[/SIZE]
Standing by, alert and ready to assist promptly if called upon by someone performing an exercise.
[SIZE=+1]Circuit Training:[/SIZE]
A workout technique in which the individual goes from one exercise to another. one set per movement per round, with minimal rest, thus gaining some aerobic benefit at the expense of maximal strength gains.
[SIZE=+1]Cramping:[/SIZE]
Exercising a muscle using shortened movements that causes a muscle to cramp, contracting painfully perhaps to the point of temporary fatigue to achieve a greater pump.
[SIZE=+1]Cutting Up:[/SIZE]
Stripping the body of excess bodyfat while retaining maximum muscularity. Also can be called Ripped, Shredded, Sliced, etc.
[SIZE=+1]Cycle:[/SIZE]
A length of time set aside for specific types of training, whether for bulking up, getting stronger, getting leaner, etc. Combining individual training cycles is sometimes referred to as periodization.
[SIZE=+1]Cycle (of steroids):[/SIZE]
Another meaning is taking one or more specialized supplements (or steroids) for a specific period of time, as taking creatine for two months, then stopping for a month.
[SIZE=+1]Definition:[/SIZE]
Extremely low bodyfat coupled with superior muscle separation and vascularity; the physical manifestation of 'dialing it in'. Adjectives that are used to describe this desired state include ripped, shredded, sliced, cut, striated.
[SIZE=+1]Dialing It In:[/SIZE]
The process of training and dieting to get shredded for a contest. Adjectives include on time, on the money, peaking.
[SIZE=+1]DPP:[/SIZE]
Short for Discipline, persistence and patience.
[SIZE=+1]Flat:[/SIZE]
Describes muscles that have lost their fullness, commonly caused by overtraining, undertraining or a lack of nutrients and water.
[SIZE=+1]Flush:[/SIZE]
To increase the blood supply to a muscle, thereby bringing in more nutrients.
[SIZE=+1]Forced Reps:[/SIZE]
Additional repetitions of an exercise performed with the help of a partner when you're unable to do anymore reps on your own.
[SIZE=+1]Freak:[/SIZE]
Anyone with inhuman size or unproportional muscles. The person that makes you stare.
[SIZE=+1]Free Hand Movement:[/SIZE]
Any exercise that can be performed without exercise equipment, using only your bodyweight, such as a push-up or squat without weight.
[SIZE=+1]Full:[/SIZE]
The appearance of muscle pressing against skin. The best competitive bodybuilders manage to look simultaneous full and shredded.
[SIZE=+1]Glutes:[/SIZE]
A shortend version of gluteas maximus, the largest of the muscles forming each of the human buttocks.
[SIZE=+1]Guns:[/SIZE]
Another word for Biceps, alone for with triceps. Other slang words include Pipes, Pythons...
[SIZE=+1]Hardbody:[/SIZE]
Women who are so toned, so good looking, with excellent physique. Top of the line fitness competitors.
[SIZE=+1]H.I.T.:[/SIZE]
High Intensity Training. A method that states it is not about doing 'more' or 'less' exercise but rather an appropriate amount on exercise to stimulate optimum muscle growth.
[SIZE=+1]Intensity:[/SIZE]
It can mean that the pace you keep while you train is higher than normal, as in moving quickly and taking a shorter rest between sets. It also can mean that the weight you use during those sessions is relatively heavy for you. It can also mean that the workload within a given time period, combined with the weight and pace is increased.
[SIZE=+1]Isolation:[/SIZE]
A technique that focuses work on an individual muscle without secondary or assisting muscle groups being involved, which provides maximal muscle shape. A good example is the seated dumbbell concentration curl.
[SIZE=+1]Juice:[/SIZE]
Meaning anabolic steroids. Other slang words for steroids include gear, sauce, roids...
[SIZE=+1]Lats:[/SIZE]
A term which is abbreviated jargon for the latissimus dorsi. This Latin term translates roughly into 'lateral muscles of the back'. When viewed from the rear, and relaxed, the lats form large. inverted cones.
[SIZE=+1]Lean Body Mass:[/SIZE]
Fat Free body tissue, comprising mostly muscle. Lean mass is the primary determinant of the body's basal metabolism (calories you burn at rest). In healthy men, bodyfat (bodyweight minus lean body mass) ranges from 8-12%; in women, 18-22%.
[SIZE=+1]Mass:[/SIZE]
Size - lots of it. If you train hard and eat right, you can add muscle. A growing bodybuilder's favorite word!
[SIZE=+1]Muscle Confusion:[/SIZE]
A technique to counteract the cessation of growth that occurs when muscles adapt to the training demands placed upon them. To keep the body growing and getting stronger, a bodybuilder needs to vary his/her sets, reps, rest, weight used and exercise angles during each workout.
[SIZE=+1]Negatives:[/SIZE]
The act of lowering a weight againt gravity, speicifcally, resisting gravity by lowering the weight slowly and under control.
[SIZE=+1]One Rep Max (1RM):[/SIZE]
Your absolute strength in a given movement. Powerlifting competitions are a test of 1RM strength. For many bodybuilders, especially beginners, 1RM training is harmful because of the higher risk of injury. A weight that you can just complete in 10 reps is a good approximation for most people of 75% of their 1RM.
[SIZE=+1]Peak:[/SIZE]
As a bodybuilder prepares for a contest, he/she cuts bodyfat to an unusually low level to bring out maximum muscularity that can be maintained for only a short time, usually only a few days.
[SIZE=+1]Plates:[/SIZE]
The weights that you put on an Olympic dumbell, specifically a 45 pound weight. Smaller weights are called quarters (25 pounds), dimes (10 pounds), and nickels (5 pounds).
[SIZE=+1]Periodization:[/SIZE]
Also called Cycle Training, a predetermined approach to strength and muscle building in which bodybuilders train light for several weels, then heavier, and then really heavy, and the process is cycled. Helps avoid injury and burnout.
[SIZE=+1]Progressive Overload:[/SIZE]
Gradually adding more resistance during strength training exercises as your stregth increase.
[SIZE=+1]Pump:[/SIZE]
The look and feeling a bodybuilder experiences when his/her muscles engorge with blood as the result of intense exercise.
[SIZE=+1]Pyramiding:[/SIZE]
The act of increasing your poundage while decreasing your reps on successive sets.
[SIZE=+1]Ripped:[/SIZE]
A condition of extremely low bodyfat with superior muscle separation and vascularity. Variations include sliced, cut, and cross-straited.
[SIZE=+1]Rep:[/SIZE]
Moving a weight through a range of motion and then back again one time, short for repetition.
[SIZE=+1]Set:[/SIZE]
A unit of exercise measurement consisting of a movement that is repeated a desired number of time.
[SIZE=+1]Shredded:[/SIZE]
To get ripped, to have extremely low bodyfat with superior muscle separation. Also, sliced, cut, and cross-straited.
[SIZE=+1]Site Injections:[/SIZE]
A terms involving injecting steroids right into a specific muscle groups, to help them bring up lagging bodyparts.
[SIZE=+1]Six Pack:[/SIZE]
A ab muscles so well developed that you can see the separate muscle under the skin where your stomach is. Other words include washboard.
[SIZE=+1]Skull Crusher:[/SIZE]
The lying french press, in which you lower a barbell from full etension above your head down to your forehead and then extend at the elbows to press it back up.
[SIZE=+1]Spot:[/SIZE]
To 'stand guard' while someone performs a set with heavy weights. A 'spotters' main duty is to prevent unjury in case that someone cannot finish is reps.
[SIZE=+1]Stacking:[/SIZE]
Usually mixing one or more supplements together.
[SIZE=+1]Unilateral Training:[/SIZE]
It means working one side of the body at a time.
[SIZE=+1]V-Taper:[/SIZE]
A person with big shoulders and a small waist.
[SIZE=+1]Vascular:[/SIZE]
The visibility of veins on a bodybuilder as a result of exercise and low bodyfat (and perhaps higher blood volume).
 
This was a great read and very informative.. I really have my work in for me to knowledge up on everything.
 
Iso-tension this is an underutilised tool which involves using posing or isometric contraction to harden and sculpt the body. Arnold and nearly all bodybuilders and physique trainers use this as apart of their training. Very effective if down between sets to stress the working muscle. Also known as muscle control. Iso-tension is a workout within a workout. Working up to posing each muscle group for up to 1 minute and being able to pose for up to 20 minutes is what all good bodybuilders need to do for a show. It is something which can be useful for non competitors as it can improve posture, shape, strengthen and enhance one's physique.
 
Aerobics

A low-intensity, sustained activity that relies on oxygen for energy. Aerobic activity builds endurance, burns fat and conditions the cardiovascular system. To attain an aerobic effect you must increase your heart rate to 60-80 percent of your maximum heart rate, and maintain that for at least 20 minutes. Examples of aerobic exercise include running, brisk walking, bicycling, swimming and aerobic dance.

Anaerobics

High-intensity exercise that burns glycogen for energy, instead of oxygen. Anaerobic exercise creates a temporary oxygen debt by consuming more oxygen than the body can supply. An example of anaerobic exercise includes weight lifting.

Bar

The metal rod that forms the handle of a barbell or dumbbell.

Barbell

A basic piece of equipment used in strength training. A barbell consists of a bar, sleeve, collars and weights or plates. Barbells can be of a fixed weight or a variable weight.

BMR

Basal metabolic rate. The number of calories consumed by the body while at rest. It is measured by the rate at which heat is given off, and is expressed in calories per hour per square meter of skin surface.

Burn

The sensation in a muscle when it has been worked intensely. It is caused by fatigue by-products and microscopic muscle tears.

Circuit Weight Training

A routine which combines light to moderate-intensity weight training with aerobic training. A circuit routine typically consists of 10-15 stations set up at close intervals. The object is to move from station to station with little rest between exercises, until the entire circuit has been completed.

Collar

The clamp that holds the weight plates in position on a bar. There are inner collars and outer collars.

Contraction

The shortening and lengthening of a muscle that occurs while performing an exercise.

Cut Up

A body that carries very little fat and is highly muscled.

Definition

A term that describes a muscle that is highly developed, the shape of which is clearly visible. A cut up muscle.

Dumbbell

A one-handed barbell. Dumbbells are shorter and generally of a lighter weight than barbells.

Exercise

In weight training, the individual movements performed during a routine. In general, the movements required to complete a workout.

Failure

Being unable to complete a movement because of fatigue.

Fatigue

Physical weariness resulting from exertion.

Flexibility

The ability of a bone joint or muscle to stretch. Good flexibility refers to an advanced degree of limberness in the joints and muscles. Flexibility can be improved with regular stretching exercises.

Hypertrophy

The increase in size of a muscle as a result of high-intensity weight training.

Intensity

The amount of force -- or energy -- you expend during a workout.

Isolation

In weight training, confining an exercise to one muscle or one part of a muscle.

Maximum Heart Rate

The fastest rate at which your heart should beat during exercise. To find your maximum rate, subtract your age from 220.

Overload

The amount of resistance against which a muscle is required to work that exceeds the weight which it normally handles.

Plates

The metal or vinyl-covered discs that add weight to a barbell.

Progression

To systematically increase the stress a muscle endures during an exercise. Progression is achieved in one of three ways: by increasing the weight in an exercise, by increasing the number of repetitions performed in one set, by increasing the number of sets, or by decreasing the rest interval between sets.

Pumped

The swelling that temporarily occurs in a muscle immediately after it has been exercised.

Repetition, or Rep

One repetition of an exercise. Each individual movement of an exercise.

Resistance

The actual weight against which a muscle is working.

Rest Interval

A pause between sets that allows the body to recover and prepare for the next set of exercises.

Ripped

A term that means a body has clearly visible muscles and very little fat.

Routine

A defined schedule of exercises, either aerobic or weight training.

Set

A cluster of repetitions, performed without rest, in a weight training routine.

Sleeve

Part of a barbell. A hollow tube that slides over the bar and is often scored to provide a better grip.

Spotter

Someone who stands nearby to assist you when performing an exercise.

Sticking Point

The point in time when a muscle will resist hypertrophy, no matter how hard you work it. Sticking points are normal. Hypertrophy usually resumes after a short period of dormancy, or if you change your routine.

Strength Training

Exercise specifically designed to work the muscles and make them larger and stronger. See weight training.

Stretching

Exercise which increases the ease and degree to which a muscle or joint can turn, bend or reach.

Target Heart Rate

In aerobics, the speed at which you want to maintain your heartbeat during exercise. Find your target heart rate by multiplying your maximum heart rate by .6 (for 60%), by .7 (for 70%) and by .8 (for 80%). Your heart rate should stay between 60 and 80% of your maximum heart rate for at least 20 minutes.

Training to Failure

Continuing a set until your muscles cannot complete another repetition of an exercise.

Weight

The amount of resistance against which a muscle is asked to work. The number of pounds used during an exercise.

Weight Training

A form of exercise in which muscles are repeatedly contracted against a weight to reach fatigue. Weight training reshapes the body and builds muscle.

Workout

A planned series of exercises.
 
Abduction: Movement of the straight legs, accomplished by contraction of the leg abductor muscles (the sarorius, primarily), from a fully abducted position back to one in which the legs are again pressed together.

Advanced Trainee: An individual with at least one year of steady, systematic resistance training experience.

Aerobic Exercise: Prolonged, moderate - intensity work that uses up oxygen at or below the level at which your cardiorespiratory system can replenish oxygen in the working muscles. Aerobic literally means “with oxygen”, and the only type of exercise that burns body fat to meet its energy needs. Bodybuilders engage in aerobic workouts to develop additional heart / lung fitness, as well as to burn off excess body fat to achieve peak contest muscularity. Common aerobic activities include running, cycling, stair climbing, swimming, dancing, and walking. Depending on how vigorously you play them, most racket sports can also be aerobic exercise.

Anaerobic Exercise: Exercise of much higher intensity than aerobic work, which uses up oxygen more quickly than the body can replenish it in the working muscles. Anaerobic exercise eventually builds up a significant oxygen debt that forces an athlete to terminate the exercise session rather quickly. Anaerobic exercise (the kind of exercise to which bodybuilding training belongs) burns up glycogen (muscle sugar) to supply its energy needs. Fast sprinting is a typical anaerobic form of exercise.

Ankle Collar: The ankle collar is a wide, leather ankle bracelet which you clip to pulleys to perform exercises such as left lifts, and leg curls. It is largely used for leg exercises.

Arm Blaster: Using an arm blaster is a very strict way to perform barbell (or E - Z bar) curls. Using an arm blaster promotes a similar effect as using a preacher bench. No elbow movement at all, and strict isolation of the biceps.

Ballistic Stretch: This involves dynamic muscle action where the muscles are stretched suddenly in a bouncing movement. For example, a ballistic stretch for the hamstrings might involve touching your toes repeatedly in rapid succession. The problem with this stretching technique is that rapid stretches invoke a powerful stretch receptor response that can result in injury. Further, after you do these exercises, the stretch receptors are overactive. This may lead to injury during an activity such as running or playing tennis.

Bar: The steel shaft that forms the basic part of a barbell or dumbbell. These bars are normally about one inch thick, and they are often encased in a revolving metal sleeve.

Barbell: Normally measuring between four and six feet in length, a barbell is the most basic piece of equipment used in weight training and bodybuilding. You can train every major muscle group using only a barbell. There are two major types of exercise where barbells are used: adjustable sets (in which you add or subtract plates to achieve the total weight desired), and fixed barbells (in which the plates are either welded or bolted in place and the total weight of the barbell is a set number). You may see fixed weights arranged by poundage in various gyms. The total weight of that barbell will likely be etched or painted on the plates. Fixed weights will save you the time of adjusting the weight in between sets. Adjustable weights are seen more commonly in home gyms, because it is very cost efficient to buy a bar, with several plates and clips to lock the weight in place.

Beginning Bodybuilder: An individual with less than six months of bodybuilding experience.

Bench: A wide variety of exercise benches are available for use in doing barbell and dumbbell exercises either lying or seated. The most common type of bench, a flat exercise bench, can be used for chest, shoulder, and arm movements. Incline and decline benches (which are set at various angles, normally between 30 to 45 degrees) also allow movements for the chest, shoulders, and arms. Adjustable benches are available for home gym use. They can be adjusted to flat, incline or decline angles.

Belts: Belts are supposed to aid you in a lift by taking pressure off the lower back when lifting very heavy weights. They will certainly help you if your goal is to develop power, and you attempt to achieve this through power lifting which consists of the three basic compound movements, squats, bench press, and dead lifting, all performed in a very low rep range. A weight belt will stabilize the upper body by increasing pressure in the abdominal cavity, and will reduce pressure in the lower back. Belts can offer a feeling of security and the knowledge that the chances of injury is lessened. However, belts are not necessary in all exercises. Stabilizing your upper body is simply not crucial for some lifts, and sporting a belt in those circumstances will not help you to achieve your goal to any greater degree. I recommend wearing a belt for big lifts, especially compound movements, done with heavy weights.

Biceps Machines: Biceps machines offer a variety of advantages to biceps training, and are advantageous to include in your workouts. With biceps machines, you can do heavy forced negatives. Your workout partner can press down on the weight as you resist during the downward part of the movement. You can get a longer range of motion, giving your more stretch and total contraction.

Biomechanics: The scientific study of body positions, or form, in sport. In bodybuilding, kinesiology studies body form when exercising with weights. When you have good biomechanics in a bodybuilding exercise, you will be safely placing maximum beneficial stress on your working muscles.

Bodybuilder’s High: Similarly to a runner’s high, a pump can, according to some experts, cause a wide variety of hormonal responses, including the release of endorphins and enkephalins, which are natural painkillers produced in the body. Not to get into too much physiology or psychology, the pump can also elicit a pleasurable response in the pleasure center of the brain, which occurs overtime through the association of bodybuilding activity and the satisfying pump felt afterwards. The difference between being pumped up after a workout while in the gym, and waking up the next morning may be so significant that some people are shocked at the way they look when pumped up. Like any other positive outcome of bodybuilding, the pump will only occur if a number of other training factors are in place, such as proper nutrition and rest. One very easy way to determine if you are overtraining is if you notice you are no longer achieving the pump after your workouts. This can easily be noticed if you are familiar with the feeling associate with the pump.

Bodybuilding: A type of weight training applied in conjunction with sound nutritional practices to alter the shape or form of one’s body. Bodybuilding is a competitive sport nationally and internationally in both amateur and professional categories for men, women, and mixed pairs. However, a majority of individuals use bodybuilding methods merely to lose excess body fat or build up a thin body.

Cambered Curling Bar: See E - Z Curl Bar

Cardiorespiratory Fitness: Physical fitness of the heart, circulatory system, and lungs indicative of good aerobic fitness.

Cheating: A method of pushing a muscle to keep it working far past the point of temporary muscular failure. In cheating, you will use a self - administered body swing, jerk, or otherwise poor form once you have reached temporary muscular failure to take some pressure off the muscles being used primarily in the movement and allow them to continue for a few more reps. Word of advice: Save cheating for the last set of an exercise.

Chinning Bar: A horizontal bar attached high on the wall or gym ceiling on which you can do chins, hanging leg raises, and other movements for your upper body.

Circuit Training: A special form of bodybuilding through which you can simultaneously increase aerobic conditioning, muscle mass, and strength. In circuit training you will plan a series of 10 to 20 exercises in a circuit around the gym. The exercises chosen should stress all parts of the body. These movements are performed with an absolute minimum of rest between exercises. At the end of a circuit a rest interval of two to five minutes is taken before going through the circuit again. Three to give circuits would constitute a circuit - training program.

Clip: The clamp used to hold plates securely in place on a barbell or dumbbell bar. The cylindrical metal clamps are held in place on the bar by means of a set screw threaded through the collar and tightened securely against the bar. Inside collars keep the plates from sliding inward and injuring your hands, while outside collars keep plates from sliding off the barbell in the middle of an exercise.

Collar: See Clip

Cool Down: If you’ve done a fast - paced workout, complete the workout with five minutes of slow aerobic activity. This cool down will give your pulse, blood pressure and breathing a chance to slow down. You can also end a weight training session with an easy set using a light weight, or some light stretching.

Concentric Contraction: When a muscle fiber develops sufficient tension to overcome a resistance so that the muscle visibly shortens and moves a body part against a resistance, it is said to be in concentric contraction. When you curl a dumbbell, the biceps muscle contracts concentrically. The resistance is the combined weight of the forearm and the dumbbell, and the source of resistance is the gravitational pull.

Cross training : The participation in two or more sports that can improve performance in each and help achieve a higher level of fitness. For example, weight training and football.

Curved Short Bar: Some of these are U - shaped and some are V - shaped. Both of them are used frequently for triceps exercises, but other exercises are also possible with them.

Dip: Word used to refer to the negative motion of a bench press exercise (intentional or otherwise). When an individual reaches the point of temporary muscular failure, the bar may "dip" (drop unintentionally) until the time at which the spotter realizes assistance is needed and helps the trainee raise the bar to the rack.

Dipping Bars: Parallel Bars set high enough above the floor to allow you to do dips between them, leg raises for your abdominals, and a variety of other exercises. Some gyms have dipping bars that are angled inward at one end; these can be used when changing your grip width on dips.

Dips: Dips are performed on an apparatus resembling two parallel bars, 3 to 4 feet high. This exercise is great for the chest and triceps.

Dorsiflexion: Moving the top of the foot upward and toward the shin.

Dumbbell: A dumbbell is a short handed barbell (usually 10 to 12 inches in length) intended primarily for use with one in each hand. Dumbbells are especially valuable when training the arms and shoulders but can be used to build up almost any muscle.

Eccentric Contraction: When a given resistance overcomes the muscle tension so that the muscle actually lengthens the muscle is said to be in eccentric contraction. Although the contracting muscle develops tension, it is overpowered by resistance. When you slowly lower a curled weight from the shoulder, the biceps muscle contracts eccentrically. If the biceps was relaxed, gravity would extend the elbow joint and lower the weight with considerable speed. Slowing the movement against resistance provides an additional muscle - developing factor.

Exercise: Each individual movement (example, a seated pulley row, barbell curl, or seated calf raise) that you perform in your bodybuilding workouts.

E - Z Curl Bar: A special type of barbell used in many arm exercises, but particularly for standing E - Z bar curls wherein it removes from your wrists strain that might be present when doing the movement with a straight bar. An E - Z curl bar is occasionally called a cambered curling bar.

Failure: See Temporary Muscular Failure (TMF)

Fast-Twitch Muscle Fibers: White muscle fibers which contract quickly and powerfully, but not with great endurance. Fast - twitch fibers are developed by heavy, low - rep, explosive weight training.

Flexibility: A uppleness of joints, muscle masses, and connective tissues which lets you move your limbs over an exaggerated range of motion. A valuable quality in bodybuilding training, it promotes optimum physical development. Flexibility can only be attained through systematic stretching training, which should form a cornerstorne of your overall bodybuilding philosophy.

Form: Form is expressed in terms of the quality of each repetition throughout the full range of motion. With good form, one should be able to reach the point of temporary muscular failure. Form involves moving the specified muscles involved in a particular exercise.

Free Weights: Barbells, dumbbells, and related equipment. Serious bodybuilders use a combination of free weights and such nautilus exercise machines such as the smith machine to incorporate a balanced training regime. Free weights are generally preferred, because they allow the stabilizer muscles to be used.

Giant Sets: Series of four to six exercises done with little to no rest between movements and a rest interval of two to three minutes between sets. You can perform giant sets for either two antagonistic muscle groups or a single body part.

Gloves: Many bodybuilders have used gloves to improve their grip in certain exercise, as well as prevent callusing from occurring. Another method is chalk, which, when put on your hands, can also improve grip considerably. If you have sensitive skin, or for any other reason feel you would benefit from the use of gloves, then by all means invest in a pair, which should not run you any more than 10 dollars. If you do develop calluses, this will also toughen up your hands, and make the use of gloves non essential.

Holistic Workouts: Sessions in which a broad spectrum of weight - rep combinations, ranging from heavy / low - rep work to light / high - rep training is followed.

Horse Shoe: The horse shoe is an individual hand grip you can use to perform exercises such as one - handed cable curls, and one - handed triceps pressdowns. This can also be used for other body parts, such as back (one - handed cable rows), and shoulders (cable lateral raises).

Hypertrophy: The scientific term denoting an increase in muscle mass and an improvement in relative muscular strength. Hypertrophy is induced by placing an "overload" on the working muscles with various techniques during a bodybuilding workout.

Intensity: The relative degree of effort you put into each set of every exercise in a bodybuilding workout. The more intensity you place on a working muscle, the more quickly it will increase in hypertrophy. The most basic methods of increasing intensity are to use heavier weights in good form on each exercise, do more reps with a set weight, or perform a consistent number of sets and reps with a particular weight in a movement, but progressively reducing the length of the rest interval between each set.

Intermediate Bodybuilder: A bodybuilder with six to 12 months of bodybuilding experience.

Inversion: Turning the bottom of the foot toward the inside. For calf raises this hits the inner head of the gastrocnemius.

Isolation Exercise: In contrast to a basic exercise, an isolation movement stresses a single muscle group (or sometimes just part of a single muscle) in relative isolation from the remainder of the body. Isolation exercises are good for shaping and defining various muscle groups. For your thighs, squats would be a typical basic movement, while leg extensions would be the equivalent isolation exercise.

Isokinetic Contraction: Isokinetic contractions can refer to either a concentric or eccentric contraction. Isokinetic contraction occurs at a set speed against a force of maximal resistance produced at all points in the range of motion. This contraction type is performed under controlled same - speed conditions.

Isometric Contraction: Isometric contraction is a muscular contraction not accompanied by movement of the joint. The muscle is neither lengthened nor shortened but tension changes can be measured. Due to the lack of visible muscle shortening, there is no movement of the actins. The term “dynamic tension” was used by Charles Atlas to refer to this term.

Isotonic Contraction: In an isotonic contraction, the tension within the muscle remains the same throughout the motion, which is to say the force of the contraction remains constant. This is also called the positive portion of an exercise movement. There are two aspects of isotonic contraction, concentric, and eccentric. Concentric contraction occurs when the muscle fibers shorten as tension develops. At the onset of the movement, the actin and myosin filaments have tremendous pulling force. Thus you will be stronger in the initial phase of most movements. Toward the end or near the peak of contraction, the ability of the filaments to slide toward each other reaches a limit and strength weakens. An eccentric contraction is the type of muscle contraction that involves lengthening the muscle fibers, such as when a weight is lowered through a range of motion. The muscle yields to the resistance, allowing itself to be stretched. Here the actin and myosin slide away from each other. The level of force generated is much higher in the eccentric phase as opposed to the concentric phase. This is due to the added friction in the eccentric portion. Concentric aspect is a form of muscle contraction that occurs when muscle fibers shorten as tension develops. Eccentric aspect is a contraction that involves lengthening the muscle fibers, such as when a weight is lowered through a range of motion. The muscle yields to the resistance, allowing itself to be stretched. This is the age of the focused eccentric contraction. Too often bodybuilders focus their attention only on the positive motion (concentratric) and pay little attention to the negative motion (eccentric). It is a matter of common sense to perform the lowering of resistance with at least as much focus and effort given to lifting the same weight.

Layoff: Most bodybuilders take a one to two week layoff from bodybuilding training from time to time. During this time, no exercise is done whatsoever. A layoff after a period of intense precompetition training is particularly benegicial as a means of allowing the body to completely rest, recuperate, and heal any minor training injuries that might have cropped up during the peaking cycle.

Log: See Weight Training Log

Long Bar: These bars are commonly used in exercises for the back, such as lat pulldowns. The advantage of the long bar is that you can adjust the width depending on how you would like to work the exercises.

Mass: The relative size of each muscle group, or of the entire physique. As long as you also have a high degree of muscularity and good balance of physical proportions, muscle mass is a highly prized quality among competitive bodybuilders.

Muscle Contraction: Any of five types of movement caused by muscular work. See: Isometric Contraction, Concentric Contraction, Eccentric Contraction, Isotonic Contraction, and Isokinetic Contraction.

Muscle Atrophy: See Atrophy Muscle Hypertrophy: See Hypertrophy Nautilus: A brand of exercise machin in common use in large gyms. Used when bodybuilders want to add variety to their workouts. For example, doing front squats on a Nautilus squat machine as oppsed to free weight squats for a workout.

Negative (Rep) The downward half of a repetition, also known as the eccentric contraction. By placing resistance on the negative half of the movement, you can induce a high degree of muscular hypertrophy.

NPC: The National Physique Committee, Inc., which administers men's and women's amateur bodybuilding competitions in the United States. THe NPC National Champions in each weight class are annually sent abroad to compete in the IFBB World Championships.

Olympian: A term reserved for use when regerring only to a bodybuilder who has competed in the Mr. Olympia or Ms. Olympia competitions. Not to be confused with the more common meaning of the term, which refers to those athletes who have competed in the Olympic games.

Olympic Barbell: A special type of barbell used in weight - lifting and power - lifting competitions, but also used by bodybuilders in heavy basic exercises such as bench press, squat and deadlifting (the three basic powerlifting movements, which can also be incorporated into bodybuilding). Each bar weighs 45 lbs (20 kg). The collars used in powerlifting and weightlifting weigh 5.5 lbs (2.5 kg). Collars at your gym may vary in weight, however.

Olympic Lifting: The type of weight lifting contested at the Olympic Games every four years, as well as at national and international competitions each year. The two lifts (the snatch and the clean - and - jerk) are contested in a wide variety of weight classes.

Overload: The amount of weight that you force a muscle to use that is over and above its normal strength ability. Applying an overload to a muscle forces it to increase in hypertrophy.

Overtraining: Chronically exceeding the body's recovery ability by doing too lengthy and . or too frequent workouts. Chronic overtraining can lead to injuries, infectious illness and worse: a cessation or even regression in gains of a muscle mass, tone, and strength.

Passive Stretch: A partner assists you in moving joints through their ranges of motion. You can achieve a greater range of motion passively than you can statically. However, because you are not controlling the movement, there is a greater risk of injury. Passive stretching is a valuable technique but should only be used by experienced people who thoroughly understand the technique. There must also be good communication between the people performing and receiving the passive stretches.

Peak: The absolute Zenith of competitive condition achieved by a bodybuilder. To peak out optimally for a bodybuilding show, you must intelligently combine bodybuilding training, aerobic workouts, diet, mental conditioning, tanning, and a large number of other preparatory factors.

Peaking: See Peak

Plantar Flexion: Moving the top of the foot away from the shin, that is, pointing the toes down, as in heel raises.

Plates: The flat discs placed on the ends of the barbell and dumbbell bars to increase the weight of the apparatus. Although some plates are made from vinyl - covered concrete, the best and most durable plates are manufactured from metal.

Poundage: The amount of weight that you use in an exercise, whether that weight is on a barbell, dumbbell, or exercise machine.

Power: In bodybuilding and power lifting, this is strength, of the ability to use very heavy poundages on all basic movements. In a sports context, power is the ability to move heavy weights explosively.

Power Lifting: A second form of competitive weight lifting (not contested at the Olympics, however) featuring three lifts: the squat, the bench press, and the deadlift. Power lifting is contested both nationally and internationally in a wide variety of weight and age classes for both men and women.

Power Rack: A power rack is a safety apparatus that has two thick adjustable steel pins that the barbell rests upon. Bodybuilders and powerlifters use the power rack to perform squats, shrugs, deadlifts and presses.

Pre-Exhaustion: A technique used primarily on torso - muscle groups (chest, back, shoulders) which makes the weaker arm muscles temporarily stronger than normal, so basic exercises like bench press, lat machine pulldowns, and standing barbell presses can be pushed far past the point at which a bodybuilder would fail to continue a set. Preex involves supersetting an isolation exercise for a particular torso muscle (for example, flat bench flyes for the pecotral muscles) with a basic movement (for example, bench presses) for the same muscle.

Progression: The act of gradually adding the amount of resistance that you use in each exercise. Without consistent progression in your workouts, you won't overload your muscles sufficiently to promote optimum increases in hypertrophy.
 
Pronation: You pronate your hand when you turn the palm down.

Proprioceptive Neuromuscular Facilitation (PNF): PNF techniques are used to improve strength and flexibility. The technique attempts to use reflexes initiated by muscle and joint receptors to cause greater training effects. The most popular PNF stretching technique is the contract - relax stretching method. The muscle is actively contracted before it is stretched. Static stretching is generally preferred over PNF.

Pump: A commonly used bodybuilding term is “the pump”. “The pump” occurs when your muscles swell up beyond their normal size by a considerable amount. Looking at yourself in the mirror, you will look bigger, and likely show appear more vascular and defined as well as being more confident in yourself. This pump is normally fast to achieve and shouldn’t take much more than four sets. I find a really good way to pump up is to do pushups until I reach failure, and normally my chest will look bigger than ever. A good pump can be felt and noticed throughout the entire workout if done properly. Oxygen and nutrients will continually to be brought into the area being exercised during intense weight training activity. Blood is forced into the area being exercised but not drawn out. This extra blood stays in there for some period, causing it to swell and appear noticeably bigger. A reason why many people like to pump up before they pose for a picture is to take advantage of this difference in size which occurs. See also, Bodybuilder’s High

Pump Set: A high - rep set, usually in the range of 15 to 20 repetitions, of a basic exercise which is done after a peak weight has been handled in that movement. Usually a pump set is the last one done on a particular basic movement. A pump set is also sometimes called a down set.

Quality Training: A type of workout used just prior to a competition in which the lengths of rest intervals between sets are progressively reduced to increase overall training intensity and to help further define the physique.

Recovery Cycle: The process between workouts during which the body flushes out fatigue toxins, restores muscle glycogen, repairs itself, and increases in hypertrophy. The length of this cycle varies from as little as 48 hours to as much as one full week, and perhaps more. Recovery is enhanced by sufficient sleep and proper nutrition.

Rep: See Repetition

Repetition: This term, which takes on the short form, rep, refers to a single rendition of an exercise. For example, if your curl a barbell through the entire range of motion once, you have completed one repetition (rep) of the movement.

Resistance: The actual amount of weight you are using in any exercise.

Rest Interval: The brief pause lasting between 30 seconds to two minutes, and in some cases even longer, which occurs between sets to allow your body to partially recuperate prior to initiating the succeeding set.

Rope: This attachment is used on a cable machine, and is commonly used for exercises such as rope pulls, or triceps pushdowns.

Routine: The term routine is very broad, and encompasses virtually every aspect of what you do in one weight lifting session, including the type of equipment you use, the number of exercises, sets, and repetitions you perform; the order in which you do the exercises; and how much rest you take between sets. You can change the factors within your routine to change your results.

Set: A set is a group of consecutive repetitions that are performed without resting. When you have completed 8 repetitions of bench press, and have reached temporary muscular failure or put the weights down, you have completed one set. See also: Working Set

Shoes: Shoes act to stabilize your balance and improve your balance in training. The design of shoes varies depending on their use, whether it is for running, or outdoor recreational activities, or simply day to day wear. The main quality of shoes, no matter which you choose, is support. Solid, thick soled shoes with good arch support are the best you can choose.

Sleeve: The hollow metal tube that fits over the bar on most exercise barbell and dumbbell sets. This sleeve makes it easier for the bar to rotate in your hands as you perform an exercise.

Smith Machine: Another name for a brand of Nautilus machines at the gym which are used to add variety to workouts. They offer many disadvantages, but normally, free weights are preferred.

Split Routine: A program in which the body is divided into segments and trained more than three times per week, as most beginners do. The most basic split routine is done four days per week. The most popular type of split routine happens by dividing the body into three parts which are done over three consecutive days, followed by a rest day and a repeat of the routine on day five. This is called a three - on / one - off split.

Spotters: Training partners who stand by to act as safety helpers when you perform heavy lifts in bench press, or squats, as well as other exercises. If you reach the point of temporary muscular failure, your spotter can help you lift the weight up in order to complete the range of motion safely. It is especially important to have a spotter when you are attempted one - rep maximums (1RM).

Static Contractions: A muscle contraction is static when the length of the muscle does not shorten during contraction. All muscle fibers enervated by a single motor nerve fiber from the spinal cord are called motor units, each of which may supply up to 150 or more muscle fibers. The strength of contraction increases in proportion to the number of motor units fired. Although a whole muscle cannot fully contract at once, a single fiber of it contracts fully, never partially, when stimulated by a motor nerve fiber. As the number of contracting motor units increases, the force of contraction increases proportionally. This also occurs when a muscle is tensed without movement. High intensity training over a prolonged period of time improves the ability of a neuro muscular system to recruit a greater number of motor units (volley firing), and thus creates a greater number of muscle fibers to contract.

Static Stretching: Here, you stretch the muscle slowly and gradually and hold the stretch for 10 to 60 seconds. Because the stretch occurs slowly, there is much less reaction from the stretch receptors. Static stretching is the type most often recommended by fitness experts because it is as effective and safer than other types of stretching exercises. The key to this technique is to stretch the muscles and joints to the point where you feel a pull but not to the point of pain. Over stretching the muscle leads to injuries.

Sticking Point: A stalling of bodybuilding progress. Also that point in a movement at which you fail to continue the upward momentum of the bar.

Straight Short Bar: This bar is used in exercises such as the triceps pushdown, as well as biceps exercises such as cable curls. It can also be used for back exercises, and other body parts

Straps: Straps are fastened around your wrists and then twisted around a bar to strengthen your grip in exercises where grip is your weakest link. Hand strength will not develop as quickly if you use straps, but this may be worth the value of being able to lift heavier weights which will result in a better developed back. Weighing the opportunity cost of straps is largely personal preference, and you can achieve great results with or without including them in your regiment of bodybuilding aids.

Stretching: A type of exercise program in which you assume exaggerated postures that stretch muscles, joints, and connective tissues, hold these positions for several seconds, and then relax and repeat the postures. Regular stretching exercise promotes body flexibility and reduces the chance of injuries while training with heavy iron.

Stress: Stress can be defined as anything that causes stress on the body’s physical or mental resources. Working out is a great way to reduce your levels of stress caused by day to day living. Lifting weights is a stress on the body that is enjoyable and takes pressures off the other stresses you are undergoing; it is a type of stress you will like to include in your everyday life. Although stress has many negative connotations, the stress which you will undergo in the gym is (almost) enjoyable and, if controlled properly will invoke a positive response in both your physical and mental fitness. If you are mentally or physically stressed in your day to day life away from the gym, it will be more difficult for your body to respond with positive muscle growth. Reducing your levels of stress related to your emotional, financial and work related stresses (as well as others) is essential to maximize gains made in the gym. At the same time, bodybuilding is a method of reducing these stresses, and in very little time with some hard work and dedication you will see your stress levels decrease after taking up recreational bodybuilding.

Supination: You supinate your hand when you turn the palm down.

Supine: Lying horizontally on the back

Temporary Muscular Failure (TMF): That point an an exercise at which you have so fully fatigued the working muscles that they can no longer complete an additional repetition of a movement with strict form. You should always take your post - warm up sets at least to the point of momentary muscular failure, and frequently past that point. Also known as Failure.

Testosterone: The male hormone primarily responsible for maintenance of muscle mass and strength induced by heavy training. Testosterone is secondarily responsible for developing such secondary male sex characteristics as a deep voice, body and facial hair, and male pattern baldness.

Towel: A towel should be part of your essential gym equipment.

Training Partner: A training partner should be someone who is willing to take the time he or she is devoting to bodybuilding, and share it with you. He or she should be willing to make time in his or her schedule to workout with you, as well as offer you constructive advice and a good spot for those hard to perform, heavy lifts. It is very important that both you and your training partner care about the success and development of the pair, and make efforts to motivate and encourage each other into achieving new muscular growth. A training partner who does not have much concern over making it to the gym with you, and helping you out isn’t much of a benefit to either of you. A training partner who does not offer you constructive advice isn’t really helping you either, if advice is what you are looking for. Also, it is very effective if both you and your training partner are trying to achieve the same bodybuilding goals. This makes it a lot more natural for both of you to help each other with steps along the way to achieving those goals.

Trisets: A series of three exercises performed with not rest between movements and a normal rest interval between trisets. Trisets increase training intensity by reducing the average length of rest interval between sets. As such, trisets are markedly more intense than supersets.

Volume Training: The use of very high number sets for each bodypart. The high volume of a workout necessitates the use of lighter - than - normal weights in each exercise, but it does build muscle in some individuals.

Warm Up: Before you pick up any weights, even a two pound dumbbell, you should always remember to warm up. You can do this by taking five easy minutes on the aerobic exercise machine. Warm ups increase the temperature of your muscles, making them more pliable and less susceptible to injury. If you plan to so a particularly heavy workout, such as a powerlifting routine, you should warm up for 10 minutes prior to attempting that kind of poundage. Various warm ups may include one of the following activities: Walking, jogging, stair climbing, stationary biking, aerobic rowing machine cross country ski machine doing many repetitions with the empty bar (bench press, military press). 10 to 15 minute session of light calisthenics, aerobic activity, and stretching taken prior to handling heavy bodybuilding training movements. A good warm - up helps prevent injuries and actually allows you to get more our of your training than if you went into a workout totally cold.

Water Bottle: You will need more water if you begin a weight training program, especially on the days you are working out, and even more importantly, during your actual workouts. A water bottle is a must.

Weight: The same as poundage or resistance.

Weight Training: An umbrella term used to categorize all acts of using resistance training. Weight training can be used to improve the body, to rehabilitate injuries, to improve sports conditioning, or as a competitive activity in terms of bodybuilding and weight lifting.

Weight Training Log: Recording your workouts in a weight training log is a good idea. It keeps you motivated, and helps you to assess your goals frequently.

Working Set: The set(s) you perform after finishing a warm up or stretching.

Workout: A bodybuilding or weight - training session.

Wraps: Wraps are used to support weak or injured joints or muscles. Wraps are used around the knees for weight training athletes performing heavy squats, or around the elbows during bench press.
 
Um... the definition for pronate and supinate are virtually the same? there must be an error there?
 
Yes, Katie. That's what jon gets for being a guy who just copies and pastes.

They're usually used to describe the position of hands or the whole body.

Supine means facing up - your palms upwards, or towards you, or your body lying face up. For example, you are supine when you do a situp, bench press, etc. Your grip on a dumbell curl is usually supinated.

Prone means facing down - your palms downwards, or away from you, or your body lying face down. For example, you are prone when you do a pushup, etc. Your grip on a bench press or overhead press bar is usually pronated.

You can remember it as an upturned hand, like serving soup - supinated. Remember one and you can remember the other.
 
Top