Many of the historical techniques currently listed here come from the teachings of Fiore dei Liberi[citation needed] or the Bolognese / Dardi School.[1]
A
a voi
phrase, lit. "to you"
Spoken by the director at outset to turn control over to the fencers. Full commencing phrase is "In guardia. Pronti/-e? A voi"
B
balestra
noun f. (pluralbalestre), lit. "crossbow"
A footwork preparation, consisting of a jump or hop forwards with an immediate lunge. This is the definition found in the French national fencing glossary, though it is common in the English world for balestra to refer to only a jump. Jumps are faster than a normal step, which helps change the rhythm and timing of moves
C
colpo fendente
noun m. (pluralcolpi fendenti), lit. "cleaving blow" [fendente cognate with English fend, both deriving from Latin findō ("cleave, split")]
(Fiore) A descending blow which parts the body from the teeth to the knee.[citation needed] Follows the same path as the cut which Dardi authors called mandritto squalembrato
A blow which goes through the middle of fendenti e sottani, delivered with the true edge on the mandritto side and the false edge on the riverso side. Its path is "between the knee and the head"[citation needed]
Abbr.mezano
colpo sottano
noun m. (pluralcolpi sottani), (archaic) "lower blow"
A rising blow which parts the body from the knees to the middle of the forehead[citation needed]
Spoken by the director to alert fencers to take their stances. Full commencing phrase is "In guardia. Pronti/-e? A voi"
in quartata
phrase
An evasive action that is recognized under category of the defensive actions (See also #passata-sotto), made with a quarter turn to the inside that conceals the front but exposes the back. This attempts to move some of the target out of harm’s way during an attack or a counter-attack. This evasive action is often executed and used in conjunction with opposition parry
M
manco
adjective m. (pluralmanchi), lit. "right (side)". antonyms:riverso, dritto
An evasive action which is initiated by dropping a hand to the floor and lowering the body under the opponent's oncoming blade. Often accompanied by a straightening of the sword arm to attempt a hit on the opposing combatant
The bastard cross guard, a variant of la posta di vera crose.[citation needed] Taking a pass at the opponent from posta breve la serpentina leaves the fencer in posta di crose bastarda, with the pommel towards the opponent
posta di corona
noun f.
The crown guard. Also called posta frontale ("frontal guard")[citation needed]
Spoken by the director at outset to ask if the fencers are ready to fight. When both fencers are female, the proper word is "pronte." Full commencing phrase is "In guardia. Pronti/-e? A voi"
plural ofpronto ("ready")
punta
noun f. (pluralpunte)
A thrust, whose path is in the middle of the body from the groin to the forehead. Can be made in five ways: Two high—One left one right—(needs work)[citation needed]
lit. "point"
R
ricasso
A dull portion of the blade in front of the quillons. In complex rapier and smallsword hilts, the ricasso is behind the guard, or the forward portion of the hilt
ridoppio
noun m. (pluralridoppi)
A rising cut with either edge that immediately follows a descending cut[1]
lit. "redouble"
riverso
noun m. (pluralriversi)
Any cut that starts opposite the fencer's dominant side. Antonyms:mandritto, e manco[1]
A certain descending diagonal cut on the line from ear to knee. Also called riverso squalembrato. Mirror of mandritto squalembrato[1]