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・ Quarterpast
・ Quarterpath Road
・ Quarters (game)
・ Quarters 1
・ Quarters 1 (Fort Monroe)
・ Quarters 1 (Fort Myer)
・ Quarters 1 (Rock Island)
・ Quarters 17 (Fort Monroe)
・ Quarters A, B, and C, Norfolk Naval Shipyard
・ Quarters A, Brooklyn Navy Yard
・ Quarters of Esch-sur-Alzette
・ Quarters of Luxembourg City
・ Quarters of nobility
・ Quarters of Paris
・ Quarters of Saint Lucia
Quarterstaff
・ Quarterstick Records
・ Quartet
・ Quartet (1948 film)
・ Quartet (1981 film)
・ Quartet (2012 film)
・ Quartet (Alison Brown album)
・ Quartet (Bill Frisell album)
・ Quartet (disambiguation)
・ Quartet (fiction)
・ Quartet (Harwood)
・ Quartet (Herbie Hancock album)
・ Quartet (McCoy Tyner album)
・ Quartet (Pat Metheny album)
・ Quartet (Santa Cruz) 1993


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Quarterstaff : ウィキペディア英語版
Quarterstaff

A quarterstaff (plural quarterstaves), also short staff or simply staff is a traditional European pole weapon and a technique of stick fighting, which was especially prominent in England during the Early Modern period.
The term is generally accepted to refer to a shaft of hardwood from long, sometimes with a metal tip, ferrule, or spike at one or both ends.
The term "short staff" compares this to the "long staff" based on the pike with a length in excess of .
==Etymology==

The name "quarterstaff" is first attested in the mid-16th century.
The "quarter" probably refers to the means of production, the staff being made from hardwood of a tree split or sawed into quarters (as opposed to a staff of lower quality made from a tree branch).〔OED; (【引用サイトリンク】title=quarterstaff )
The possibility that the name derives from the way the staff is held, the right hand grasping it one-quarter of the distance from the lower end, is suggested in Encyclopædia Britannica.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=quarterstaff(weapon) )
While this interpretation may have given rise to such positions in 19th-century manuals,
it probably arose by popular etymology. The OED in support of its explanation of the "quarter" in origin referring to the way the staff was made points to an early attestation of the term, dated to 1590,
''Plodding through Aldersgate, all armed as I was, with a quarter Ashe staffe on my shoulder.''
George Silver, an English fencer who wrote two books (1599, 1605) including lengthy sections on staff fighting does not use the term "quarterstaff", but instead calls it a "short staff" (as opposed to the "long staff"). Joseph Swetnam, writing in 1615, distinguishes between the "quarterstaff" of in length and the "long staff" of .〔Joseph Swetnam, "The Schoole of the Noble and Worthy Science of Defence". London: Nicholas Okre, 1617.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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