Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Young people have no martial arts. Who said that?

Young people have no martial arts. Who said that?

From: Ma Baoguo.

Interpretation: Used to describe young people as "fierce".

Original text: "The young man didn't have martial arts, and he came to sneak up on me, a 69-year-old man. The traditional kung fu emphasized' point to stop', and he lost. If I punch hard, I will break his nose with one punch. "

Word source:

In the contest with the young Wang Qingmin, within 30 seconds, Ma Baoguo was knocked down by Wang Qingmin three times and directly KO. Afterwards, a video of Qing Wu in Ma Baoguo covering his eyelids in June, 5438 +2020 10 was circulated on the Internet, accusing him of: "Young people have no martial arts, attacking a 69-year-old man, and traditional kung fu pays attention to' point to stop', but' point to stop' he lost. If I punch hard, I will break his nose with one punch. "

According to Ma Baoguo, this is a story between two young people who treated cervical vertebrae and Ma Baoguo in June 2020. It happened to be widely circulated after the match with Wang Qingmin, which was in sharp contrast to Ma Baoguo's boasting about rehabilitating traditional kung fu, so this sentence was also played as a ghost animal.

Extended data:

Young people don't have martial arts. Next sentence: behave yourself

Behave yourself and mind your own business. Ma Baoguo, the head of Hunyuan Xingyiquan Tai Ji Chuan, said in a short video that he was injured while competing with young people. "I suggest this young man take care of himself."

In the mouth of Ma Baoguo, the head of Hunyuan Xingyiquan in Tai Ji Chuan, the original meaning is "meddling". Because nonstandard Mandarin sounds like "behave yourself". Hello, take care! Then it sounds like you have to behave yourself, or behave yourself.