Asian squat

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English[edit]

Noun[edit]

Asian squat (plural Asian squats)

  1. A position assumed by bending at the knees with one's feet flat on the ground and knees spread apart.
    • 1989, Robert Sam Anson, War News: A Young Reporter in Indochina[1], New York, NY: Touchstone, →ISBN, page 278:
      I thanked him and dropped down into an Asian squat alongside the Cortina's left fender.
    • 1999, Steve Ilg, The Winter Athlete: Secrets of Wholistic Fitness for Outdoor Performance[2], Boulder, CO: Johnson Books, →ISBN, page 428:
      Bring chest forward, settle hips very deep, almost assuming an Asian Squat position. Look forward, preferably not in a mirror. One explosive, highly technical movement now occurs as you whip the barbell overhead and jump under it, landing in a full Asian Squat holding the barbell directly overhead (bottom position of an Overhead Squat).
    • 2009, Christopher G. Moore, Paying Back Jack[3], New York, NY: Grove Press, →ISBN, page 178:
      She assumed the Asian squat, feet splayed, sucking on her cigarette.
    • 2020, Lan Cao, Harlan Margaret Van Cao, Family in Six Tones: A Refugee Mother, An American Daughter[4], New York, NY: Viking, →ISBN, page 77:
      My mother was doing the unnervingly uncouth Asian squat—a deep, flamboyant squat, feet flat, weight fully on heels. I could do it too, quite easily, in fact, and hold the position for a long time.

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