A comprehensive glossary of Bodybuilding and Fitness related
terms.
Abduction -
Movement of a limb away from middle of body, such as bringing arm to shoulder
height from hanging-down position.
Abs -
Abbreviation for abdominal muscles.
Abyss - A barrier
which stands between knowing what needs to be done and actually doing it
Accommodating Resistance -
Increasing resistance as lifter's force increases through range of motion.
Nautilus machines are said to provide accommodating resistance.
Adduction - Movement
of a limb toward middle of body, such as bringing arm to side from extended
position at shoulder.
Adhesion -
Fibrous patch holding muscles or other parts together that are normally
separated.
Aerobic Exercise -
Prolonged, moderate-intensity work that uses up oxygen at or below the level
at which your cardiorespiratory (heart-lung) system
can replenish oxy-gen in the working muscles.
Aerobic literally means with oxygen, and it is the only type of exercise
which burns body fat to meet its energy needs. Bodybuilders engage in aerobic
workouts to develop additional cardiorespiratory
fitness, as well as to burn off excess body fat to achieve peak contest
muscularity. Common aerobic activities in-clude
running, cycling, swimming, dancing, and walk-ing.
Depending on how vigorously you play them, most racquet sports can also be
aerobic exercise.
AFWB -
American Federation of Women Bodybuilders - group that administers women's
amateur bodybuilding in America.
Agonist -
Muscle directly engaged in contraction, which is primarily responsible for
movement of a body part.
All-or-None -
Muscle fiber contracts fully or it does not contract at all.
Amino acids - A
group of compounds that serve as the building blocks from which protein and
muscle are made.
AMUR - An
abbreviation for the Adult Minimum Daily Requirement of certain nutrients as
established by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
Anabolic Drugs -
Also called anabolic steroids, these are artificial male hormones that aid in
nitrogen retention and thereby add to a male bodybuilder's muscle mass and
strength. These drugs are not without hazardous side effects, however, and
they are legally available only through a physician's prescription. Steroids
are available in most gyms via the black market, but it is very danger-ous to use such unknown substances to increase muscle
mass.
Anabolic Steroid -
Synthetic chemical that mimics the muscle-building characteris-tics
of the male hormone testosterone.
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.
Androgenic Drugs - Androgenics are drugs that simulate the effects of the
male hormone testosterone in the human body. Androgens do build a degree of
strength and muscle mass, but they also stimulate secondary sex
characteristics such as increased body hair, a deepened voice, and high
levels of aggression. Indeed, many bodybuilders and pow-erlifters
take androgens to stimulate aggressiveness in the gym, resulting in more
productive workouts
Antagonist -
Muscle that counteracts the agonist, lengthening when agonist muscle
contracts.
Antioxidant -
Small compounds that minimize tissue oxidation and help con-trol free radicals and their negative effects.
APC -
American Physique Committee, Inc. Group that administers men's amateur
bodybuilding in America.
Arm Blaster -
Aluminum or fiberglass strip about 5" x 24", supported at waist
height by a strap around neck. Keeps elbows from moving while curling barbell
or dumbbells or doing triceps pushdowns.
Atrophy -
Withering away - decrease in size and functional ability of tissue or organs.
Baby's Butt -
Indentation between the two heads of biceps muscles of very muscular athlete.
Back-Cycling -
Cutting back on either number of sets, repetitions or amount of weight used
during an exercise session.
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 -
Weight used for exercise, consisting of a rigid handle 5-7' long, with
detachable metal discs at each end.
Balance - A
term referring to an even relationship of body proportions in a man's
physique. Perfectly balanced phys-ical proportions
are a much-sought-after trait among competitive bodybuilders.
Basic Exercise - A
bodybuilding exercise which stresses the largest muscle groups of your body
(e.g., the thighs, back, and/or chest), often in combination with smaller
muscles. You will be able to use very heavy weights in basic exer-cises in order to build great muscle mass and
physical power. Typical basic movements include squats, bench presses, and deadlifts. (You should also see the listing for Isolation
Exercise.)
Benches - A
wide variety of exercise benches is available for use in doing barbell and dumbbell exercise either lying or seated on a bench. 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 angled at
about 30-45 degrees) also allow movements for the chest, shoulders, and arms.
Biomechanics -
Science concerned with the internal and external forces acting on a human
body and the effects produced by these forces.
Body composition - The
percentage of your body weight composed of fat compared to fat-free mass.
Bodybuilding - A
type of weight training applied in con-junction with sound nutritional
practices to alter the shape or form of one's body. In the context of this
book, bodybuilding is a competitive sport nationally and inter-nationally 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 too thin part of the body.
Buffed - As
in a "finely buffed finish" - good muscle size and definition,
looking good.
Bulking Up -
Gaining body weight by adding muscle, body fat or both.
Burn - A
beneficial burning sensation in a muscle that you are training. This burn is
caused by a rapid buildup of fatigue toxins in the muscle and is a good
indication that you are optimally working a muscle group. The best
bodybuilders consistently forge past the pain barrier erected by muscle burn
and consequently build very mas-sive, highly
defined muscles.
Burns - A
training technique used to push a set past the normal failure point, and
thereby to stimulate it to greater hypertrophy. Burns consist of short, quick,
bouncy reps 4-6 inches in range of motion. Most bodybuilders do 8-12 burns at
the end of a set that has already been taken to failure. They generate
terrific burn in the muscles, hence the name of this technique.
CAFB - The
Canadian Amateur Federation of Bodybuild-ers, the
sports federation responsible in Canada for ad-ministering amateur
bodybuilding for men, women, and mixed pairs. The CAFB is one of the more
than 120 national bodybuilding federations affiliated internation-ally
with the IFBB.
Calories - The
unit for measuring the energy value of foods.
Carbohydrates -
Organic compounds containing carbon, hydrogen, and oxy-gen.
They're a very effective fuel source for the body. The different types of
carbohydrates include starches, sugars, and fibers. ('carbohydrates
con-tain four calories per gram. Glucose-blood
sugar-is a carbohydrate used by every cell in the body as fuel.
Cardiorespiratory
Fitness - Physical fitness of the heart, circulatory system and
lungs that is indicative of good aerobic fitness.
Cardiovascular Training -
Physical conditioning that strengthens heart and blood vessels.
Chalk Powder -
Used on hands for secure grip.
Cheating - A
method of pushing a muscle to keep working far past the point at which it
would normally fail to continue contracting due to excessive fatigue buildup.
In cheating you will use a self-administered body swing, jerk, or otherwise
poor exercise form once you have reached the failure point to take some of
the pressure off the muscles and allow them to continue a set for two or
three repetitions past failure.
Chinning Bar - A
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. A chinning bar
is analogous to the high bar male gymnasts use in national and international
competitions.
Cholesterol - A
type of fat that, although most widely known as a "bad fat"
implicated in promoting heart disease and stroke, is a vital component in the
production of many hormones in the body. There are different types of
cholesterol: namely, MDL and LDL (MDL being the "good" form and LDL
being the "had" form).
Circuit Training -
Going quickly from one exercise apparatus to another and doing a prescribed
number of exercises on each apparatus, to keep pulse rate high and promote
overall fitness,
Clean - The
movement of raising a barbell or two dumb-bells from the floor to your
shoulders in one smooth motion to prepare for an overhead lift. To properly
exe-cute a clean movement, you must use the coordinated strength of your
legs, back, shoulders, and arms.
Clean diet -
This refers to eating nutrient-rich, low-fat meals.
Clean and Jerk -
Olympic lift where weight is raised from floor to overhead in 2 movements
(see also SNATCH).
Clean and Snatch - One
of 2 Olympic lifts where weight is raised from floor to overhead at arms'
length in one motion.
Collar - The
clamp that is 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 plates from sliding inward and injuring your hands, while
outside collars keep plates from sliding off the barbell in the middk of an exercise.
Compound Training -
Sometimes called "giant sets"; doing 34 exercises for same muscle,
one after other, with minimal rest in between.
Couples' Competition - A
relatively new form of body-building competition in which man-woman teams com-pete against others
with particularly appealing posing routines featuring adagio and other dance
movements and lifts. More frequently called "Mixed Pairs
Competition," this event is rapidly gaining international popularity
with the bodybuilding community and general public, and is held in both
amateur and professional World Championships.
Concentric - The
lifting phase of an exercise, when the muscle shortens or contracts. For
example, When you lift the weight in a bench press, press-ing
it from your chest to the lock-out position, that's the concentric, or
"positive," phase of the exercise.
Crunches -
Abdominal~ exercises - sit-ups done lying on floor with legs on bench, hands
behind neck.
Curl-Bar -
Cambered bar designed for more comfortable grip and less forearm strain.
Cut Up (or Cut) - A
term used to denote a bodybuilder who has an extremely high degree of
muscular definition due to a low degree of body fat.
Dead Lift - One
of three powerlifting events (other two are squat
and bench press). Weight is lifted off floor to approximately waist height.
Lifter must stand erect, shoulders back.
Deficiency - A
sub optimal level of one or more nutrients that are essential for good
health, most often seen with vitamins. A deficiency can be caused by poor
nutrition. increased bodily demands (especially from
intense train-ing), or both.
Definition - The
absence of fat over clearly delineated muscular movement. Definition is often
referred to as "muscularity," and a highly defined bodybuilder has
so little body fat that very fine grooves of muscularity called
"striations" will be clearly visible over each major muscle group.
Delts -
Abbreviation for deltoids, the large triangular muscles of the shoulder that
raise the arm away from the body and perform other functions.
Density -
Muscle hardness, which is also related to muscu-lar
definition. A bodybuilder can be well-defined and still have excess fat
within each major muscle complex. But when he has muscle density, even this
intramuscular fat has been eliminated. A combination of muscle mass and muscle
density is highly prized among all competitive bodybuilders.
Diet -
Food and drink regularly consumed by a person, often according to specific
guidelines to improve physical condition.
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 which are angled inward at one end; these can be used
when changing your grip width on dips.
Dip Belt -
Large heavy belt worn around hips with chain at each end that can be attached
to a barbell plate or dumbbell for additional resistance during certain
exercises like dips.
Diuretics -
Sometimes called "water pills," these are drugs and herbal
preparations that remove excess water from a bodybuilder's system just prior
to a show, thereby reveal-ing greater muscular
detail. Harsh chemical diuretics can be quite harmful to your health,
particularly if they are used on a chronic basis. Two of the side effects of
excessive chemical diuretic use are muscle cramps and heart ar-rhythmias (irregular heart beats).
Double (Split Training) Routine -
Working out twice a day to allow for shorter, more intense workouts. Usually
performed by advanced bodybuilders preparing for contests.
Drying Out - Encouraging
loss of body fluids by limiting liquid intake, eliminating salt, sweating
heavily and/or using diuretics.
Dumbbell -
Weight used for exercising consisting of rigid handle about 14" long
with sometimes detachable metal discs at each end.
Easy Set -
Exercise not close to maximum effort, as in a warm-up.
Eccentric - The
lowering phase of an exercise, when the muscle lengthens. For example,
lowering the weight to your chest during the bench press is the eccentric, or
"negative," portion of the exercise.
Energy - The
capacity to do work. Energy harnessed is power.
Endurance -
Ability of a muscle to produce force continually over a period of time.
Essential fatty acids (EFAs) - Fats our bodies can't make, so we must obtain
them through our diets. These fats (which include linoleic
and linolenic acid) are very important to hormone
production, as well as cellular synthesis and integrity. Good sources of
these fats arc flaxseed oil and safflower oil
Estrogen -
Female sex hormone.
Exercise -
Each individual movement (e.g., a seated pulley row, barbell curl, or seated
calf raise) that you perform in your bodybuilding workouts.
Extension -
Body part (i.e. hand, neck, trunk, etc.) going from a bent to a straight
position, as in leg extension.
Failure -
That point in an exercise at which you have so fully fatigued your working
muscles that they can no longer complete an additional repetition of a
movement with strict biomechanics. You should always take your post-warm-up
sets at least to the point of momentary muscular failure, and frequently past
that point.
Fascia -
Fibrous connective tissue that covers, supports and separates ~l muscles and
muscle groups. It also unites skin with underlying tissue.
Fast-Twitch -
Refers to muscle cells that fire quickly and are utilized in anaerobic
activities like sprinting and powerlifting.
Fat - One
of the macronutrients. Fat contains nine calories per gram; it has the most
calories of MI the macronutrients. There are two types of fat-saturated
"bad" fat and unsaturated "good" fat.
Fat free mass (FFM) - The
part of the body not containing fat, including: bone, muscle, skin, organs,
water, hair, Hood, and lymph.
Flex -
Bend or decrease angle of a joint; contract a muscle.
Flexibility - A
suppleness of joints, muscle masses, and connective tissues which lets you
move your limbs over an exaggerated range of motion, a valuable quality in
body-building training, since it promotes optimum physical development.
Flexibility can only be attained through systematic stretching training,
which should form a cor-nerstone of your overall
bodybuilding philosophy.
Flexion -
Bending in contrast to extending, as in leg flexions.
Flush -
Cleanse a muscle by increasing the blood supply to it, removing toxins left
in muscle by exertion,
Forced Reps -
Forced reps are a frequently used method of extending a set past the point of
failure to induce greater gains in muscle mass and quality. With forced reps,
a training partner pulls upward on the bar just enough for you to grind out
two or three reps past the failure thresh-old.
Form -
This is simply another word to indicate the biome-chanics
used during the performance of any bodybuild-ing or
weight-training movement. Perfect form involves moving only the muscles specitied in an exercise description.
Free Style Training -
Training all body parts in one workout.
Free Weights -
Barbells, dumbbells, and related equip-ment.
Serious bodybuilders use a combination of free weights and such exercise
machines as those manufac-tured
by Nautilus and Universal Gyms, but they primarily use free weights in their
workouts.
Frequent Feeding -
Eating often throughout the day to work with your body, not against it. fly eating at regular intervals throughout the day
(approximately every two to three hours), you can keep your metabolism
elevated and energy levels stable.
Fructose - The
main type of sugar found in fruit. It's sweeter than sucrose (table sugar).
Giant Sets -
Series of 4-6 exercises done with little or no rest between movements and a
rest interval of 3-4 minutes between giant sets. You can perform giant sets
for either two antagonistic muscle groups or a single body part.
Glucose - The
simplest sugar molecule. It's also the main sugar found in blood and is used
as a basic fuel for the body.
Gluteals -
Abbreviation for gluteus maximus, medius and minimus; the
buttocks muscles.
Glycogen - The
principal stored form of carbohydrate energy (glucose), which is reserved in
muscles. When your muscles are full of glycogen, they look and feel full.
Gorging -
This refers to eating large amounts of food at one meal, then waiting for
many hours, maybe a full day, before eating again. This is also known as
bingeing.
Grazing -
This term refers to frequent feedings-eating small amounts of food often.
Hand Off -
Assistance in getting a weight to starting position for an exercise.
Hard Set -
Perform a prescribed number of repetitions of an exercise using maximum
effort.
HDL -
This stands for "high-density lipoprotein." It's one of the subcate-gories of cholesterol--typically thought of as
the "good" cholesterol. You may be able to raise your HDL
cholesterol levels by ingesting qual-ity
unsaturated fats like flaxseed oil. Exercise has ~so been shown to increase
HDL levels.
Hypertrophy - The
scientific term denoting an increase in muscle mass and an improvement in
relative muscular strength. Hypertrophy is induced by placing an
"over-load" on the working muscles with various training tech-niques during a bodybuilding workout.
IFBB -
International Federation of Bodybuilders, founded in 1946 - group that
over-sees worldwide men's and women's amateur and professional bodybuilding.
Intensity - The
relative degree of effort that 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 in 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 rest intervals between sets.
Isokinetic
Exercise - Isotonic exercise in which there is ACCOMMODATING
RESISTANCE. Also refers to constant speed. Nautilus and Cybex
are two types of isokinetic machines, where machine
varies amount of resistance being lifted to match force curve developed by
the muscle.
Isometric Exercise -
Muscular contraction where muscle maintains a constant length and joints do
not move. These exercises are usually performed against a wall or other
immovable object.
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 isola-tion 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 move-ment,
while leg extensions would be the equivalent isola-tion
exercise.
Isotonic Exercise -
Muscular action in which there is a change in length of muscle and weight)
keeping tension constant. Lifting free weights is a classic isotonic
exercise.
Judging Rounds - In
the universally accepted and applied IFBB system of judging, bodybuilders are
evaluated in three distinctly different rounds of judging, plus a final pose
down round for only the top five competitors after the first three rounds
have been adjudicated. In Round One, the competitors are viewed in groups and
individually in seven well-defined compulsory poses; in Round Two, they are
viewed semi-relaxed from the front, both sides, and back; and in Round Three,
they perform their own uniquely personal free-posing routines to their own
choice of music. Overall, this use of three rounds of judging and a pose down
round results in a very fair choice of the final winners of a bodybuilding
champion-ship.
Juice - A
slang term for anabolic steroids, e.g., being "on the juice."
Kinesiology -
Study of muscles and their movements.
Knee Wraps -
Elastic strips about 3½" wide used to wrap knees for better support when
performing squats, dead lifts, etc.
Lats -
Abbreviation for latissimus dorsi,
the large muscles of the back that move the arms downward, backward and in
internal rotation.
Law Of Nature - Use
it or lose it.
Layoff -
Most intelligent bodybuilders take a one- or two- week layoff from
bodybuilding training from time to time, during which they totally avoid the
gym. A layoff after a period of intense precompetition
preparation is particularly beneficial as a means of allowing the body tocomp)tfr)y mit r&u0Pr2ta &n4 ~ L~flW~
injuries that might have cropped up during the peaking cycle
LDL -
This stands for "low-density lipoprotein" and is a subcategory of choles-terol, typically thought of as the "bad"
cholesterol. Levels of LDL cholesterol can be elevated by ingestion of
saturated fats and a lack of exercise.
Lean Body Mass -
Everything in the body except fat, including bone, organs, skin, nails and
all body tissue including muscle. Approximately 50-60% of lean body mass is
water.
Lift Off -
Assistance in getting weight to proper starting position.
Ligament -
Strong, fibrous band of connecting tissue connecting 2 or more bones or
cartilages or supporting a muscle, fascia or organ.
Linoleic acid - An
essential fatty acid and, more specifically, an omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty
acid. Good sources of this fatty acid are safflower oil and soybean oil.
Linolenic acid - An
essential fatty acid and, more precise an omega-3 poly-unsaturated fatty
acid. It is found in high concentrations in flaxseed oil.
Lock Out -
Partial repetition of an exercise by pushing the weight through only last few
inches of movement.
Lower Abs -
Abbreviation for abdominal muscles below the navel. Max- Maximum effort for
one repetition of an exercise.
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.
Meal -
Food that's eaten at one time. Each meal should contain a portion (which is
the size of the palm of your hand or your clenched fist) of protein and a
portion of carbohydrates.
Metabolic rate - The
rate you convert energy stores into working energy in your body. In other
words, it's how Fast your "whole system" runs. The meta-bolic rate is controlled by a number of factors,
including: muscle mass (the greater your muscle mass, the greater your
metabolic rate), calorie intake, and exercise.
Metabolism - The
use of nutrients by the body. It's the process by which sub-stances come into
the body and the rate at which they are used.
Midsection -
Muscles of abdominal area, including upper and lower abdominals, obliques and rectus abdominis muscles.
Military press -
Pressing a barbell from upper chest upward in standing or sitting position.
Minerals -
Naturally occurring, inorganic substances that are
essential for human life, which play a role in many vital metabolic
processes.
Mixed Pairs Competition -
Couples' competition, a rela-tively new form of
bodybuilding competition in which man-woman teams compete against others with
particu-larly appealing posing routines featuring
adagio and other dance movement
Muscle -
Tissue consisting of fibers organized into bands or bundles that contract to
cause bodily movement. Muscle fibers run in the same direction as the action
they perform.
Muscle Head -
Slang for someone whose life is dominated by training.
Muscle Spasm -
Sudden, involuntary contraction of muscle or muscle group.
Muscle Tone -
Condition in which a muscle is in a Constant yet slight state of contraction
and appears firm.
Muscularity - An
alternative term for "definition" or "cuts."
Myositis -
Muscular soreness due to inflammation that often Occurs 1-2 days after
unaccustomed exercise.
Nautilus - Isokinetic type exercise machine, which attempts to match
resistance with user's force.
Negative Reps - One
or two partners help you lift a weight up to 50% heavier than you would
normally lift to finish point of movement. Then you slowly lower weight on
your own.
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 division are annually sent abroad to compete in the
IFBB World Championships.
Nutrients -
Components of food that help nourish the body: that is, they provide energy
or serve as "building materials." These nutrients include carbohy-drates, fats, proteins, vitamins, minerals,
water, etc.
Nutrition - The
applied science of eating to foster greater health, fitness, and muscular
gains. Through correct application of nutritional practices, you can
selectively add muscle mass to your physique, or totally strip away all body
fat, revealing the hard-earned muscles lying beneath your skin,
Non-Locks -
Performing an exercise without going through complete range of motion. For
example, doing squat without coming to full lockout position of knees or
pressing a barbell without locking out elbows.
Obliques -
Abbreviation for external obliques, the muscles to
either side of abdominals that rotate and flex the trunk.
Odd Lifts -
Exercises used in competition other than snatch and clean and jerk, such as
squats, bench presses, and barbell curls.
Olympian - A
term reserved for use when referring only to a bodybuilder who has competed
in the Mr. Olympia or Ms. Olympia competitions.
Olympic Barbell - A
special type of barbell used in weightufting and powerlifting competitions, but also used by bodybuilders
in heavy basic exercises such as squats, bench presses, barbell bent rows,
standing barbell curls, standing barbell presses, and deadlifts.
An Olympic barbell sans collars weighs 45 pounds, and each collar weighs five
pounds.
Olympic Lifting - The
type of weightlifting competition contested at the Olympic Games every four
years, as well as at national and international competitions each year. Two
lifts (the snatch and the clean and jerk) are contested in a wide variety of
weight classes.
Onion Skin -
Slang denoting skin with very low percentage of subcutaneous fat which helps
accentuate muscularity.
Optimal nutrition - The
best possible nutrition; distinct from merely adequate nutrition, which is
characterized by no overt deficiency. This term describes people free from
marginal deficiencies, imbalances, and toxicities, and who are not at risk
for such.
Overload Principle -
Applying a greater load than normal to a muscle to increase its capability
Partial Reps -
Performing an exercise without going through a complete range of motion
either at the beginning or end of a rep.
Peak Contraction -
Exercising a muscle until it cramps by using shortened movements. Pecs
- Abbreviation for pectoral muscles of the chest.
P.H.A. -
Peripheral Heart Action; a system of training where you go from one exercise
to another, with little or no rest, preferably alternating upper body and
lower body exercises. Designed for cardiovascular training and to develop
muscle mass.
Plates - The
flat discs placed on the ends of barbell and dumbbell bars to increase the
weight of the apparati. Although some plates are
made from vinyl-covered con-crete, the best and
most durable plates are manufactured from metal.
Plyometric
Exercise - Where muscles are loaded suddenly and stretched, then
quickly contracted to produce a movement, Athletes who must jump do these,
i.e. jumping off bench to ground, quickly rebounding to another bench.
Portion - The
amount of carbohydrates or protein one should eat with each meal. A portion
is the size of the palm of your hand or your clenched fist.
Pose -
Each individual stance that a bodybuilder does onstage in order to highlight
his muscular development.
Pose Down -
Bodybuilders performing their poses at the same time in a competition, trying
to out pose one another.
Poundage - The
amount of weight that you use in an exercise, whether that weight is on a
barbell, dumbbell, or exercise machine.
Power -
Strength + Speed.
Power Lifts -
Three movements used in powerlifting competition:
the squat, bench press and dead lift.
Power Lifting - A
second form of competitive weightlift-mg (not
contested in the Olympics, however) featuring three lifts: the squat, bench
press, and deadlift. Power lifting is contested
both nationally and internationally in a wide variety of weight classes for
both men and women
Power Mindset - The
state of being where you feel self-reliant, confident, and strong.
Power Training -
System of weight training using low repetitions, heavy weights.
Progression - The
act of gradually adding to the amount of resistance that you use in each
exercise. Without consis-tent progression in your
workouts, you won't overload your muscles sufficiently to promote optimum
increases in hypertrophy.
Progressive Resistance -
Method of training where weight is increased as muscles gain strength and
endurance, the backbone of all weight training.
Proteins -
Proteins are the building blocks of muscle, enzymes, and sonic hor-mones. They are made up of amino acids and are
essential for growth and repair in the body. A gram of protein contains four
calories. Those from ani-mal sources contain the
essential amino acids. Those from vegetable sources contain some but not all
of the essential amino acids. Proteins are broken up by the body to produce
amino acids.
Pump - The
tight, blood-congested feeling in a muscle after it has been intensely
trained. Muscle pump is caused by a rapid influx of blood into the muscles to
remove fatigue toxins and replace supplies of fuel and oxygen. A good muscle
pump indicates that you have optimally worked a muscle group.
Pumped -
Slang meaning the muscles have been made large by increasing blood supply to
them through exercise.
Pumping Iron -
Phrase that has been in use since the 1950s, but recently greatly
popularized. Lifting weights.
Quads -
Abbreviation for quadriceps femoris muscles,
muscles on top of legs, which consist of 4 parts
(heads).
Quality Training -
Training just before bodybuilding competition where intervals between sets
are drastically reduced to enhance muscle mass and density, and low-calorie
diet is followed to reduce body fat.
Repetition (rep) - The
number of times you lift and lower a weight in one set of an exercise. For
example, if you lift and lower a weight 10 times before set-ting the weight
down, you have completed 10 "reps" in one set.
Rep Out -
Repeat the same exercise over and over until you are unable to do any more.
Reps -
Abbreviation for REPETITIONS.
Resistance exercise -
Working out with weights or using your body to resist some other force. This
includes a wide spectrum of motion, from push-ups to dumbbell curls.
Rest Interval -
Pause between sets of an exercise, which allows muscles to recover partially
before beginning next set.
Rest Pause Training -
Training method where you press out one difficult repetition, then replace
bar in stands, then after a 10-20 second rest, do another rep, etc.
Rest period - The
amount of time you allow between sets and exercises
Ripped -
Slang meaning extreme muscularity.
Roid -
Slang for ANABOLIC STEROID.
Routine -
Also called a training schedule or program, a routine is the total list of
exercises, sets, and reps (and sometimes weights) used in one training
session.
Saturated fats -
These are 4bad" fats. They are called saturated because they contain no
open spots on their carbon skeletons. These bad fats have been shown to raise
cholesterol levels in the body. Sources of these fats include animal foods
and hydrogenated vegetable oils, such as margarine.
Set -
Group of reps (lifting and lowering a weight) of an exercise after which you
take a brief rest period. For example, if you complete 10 reps, set the
weight down, complete eight more reps, set the weight down again, and repeat
for six more reps, you have completed three sets of the exercise.
Sleeve - The
hollow metal tube fit 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
do an exercise. Spotters - Training partners who stand by to act as
safety helpers when you perform such heavy exercises as squats and bench
presses. If you get stuck under the weight or begin to lose control of it,
spotters can rescue you and prevent needless injuries.
Slow-Twitch -
Muscle cells that contract slowly, are resistant to
fatigue and are utilized in endurance activities such as long-distance
running, cycling or swimming.
Snatch -
Olympic lift where weight is lifted from floor to overhead, (with arms
extended) in one continuous movement (see also CLEAN AND JERK).
Spot -
Assist if called upon by someone performing an exercise.
Spotter - Person
who watches a partner closely to see if any help is needed during a specific
exercise.
Steroids -
Prescription drugs which mimic male hor-mones, but
without most of the androgenic side effects of actual testosterone. Many
bodybuilders use these danger-ous drugs to help
increase muscle mass and strength.
Sticking Point - A
stalling out of bodybuilding progress.
Straight Sets -
Groups of repetitions (SETS) interrupted by only brief pauses (30-90
seconds).
Strength - The
ability of a muscle to produce maximum amount of force.
Strength Training -
Using resistance weight training to build maximum muscle force.
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, relax and then repeat the postures. Regular stretching
exercise promotes body flexibility.
Stretch Marks -
Tears (slight scars) in skin caused if muscle or fat tissue has expanded in
volume faster than skin can grow.
Striations - Grooves
or ridge marks seen under the skin, the ultimate degree of muscle definition.
Super Set -
Alternating back and forth between two exercises until the prescribed number
of sets is complete.
Supplement -
This is a term used to describe a preparation such as a tablet, pill, or
powder that contains nutrients. Supplements are used to help you achieve
optimal nutrient intake.
Symmetry - The
shape or general outline of a person's body, as when seen in silhouette. If
you have good sym-metry,
you will have relatively wide shoulders, flaring lats,
a small waist-hip structure, and generally small joints.
Tendon - A
band or cord of strong, fibrous tissue that connects muscles to bone.
Testosterone - The
male hormone primarily responsible for the 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
hair, and male pattern baldness.
Thick Skin -
Smooth skin caused by too much fatty tissue between the layers of muscle and
beneath skin.
Tone - See
MUSCLE TONE.
Training Effect -
Increase in functional capacity of muscles as result of increased (overload)
placed upon them.
Training Straps -
Cotton or leather straps wrapped around wrists, then under and over a bar
held by clenched hands to aid in certain lifts (rowing, chin-ups, shrugs,
dead lifts, cleans, etc.) where you might lose your grip before working
muscle to desired capacity-
Training to Failure -
Continuing a set until it is impossible to compete
another rep without assistance.
Traps -
Abbreviation for trapezius muscles, the largest
muscles of the back and neck that draw head backward and rotate scapula.
Trimming Down - To
gain hard muscular appearance by losing body fat.
Tri Sets - Alternating
back and forth between 3 exercises until prescribed number of sets is
completed. Universal Law of Reciprocation- The more you help others, the more
your life is enhanced.
Universal Machine - One
of several types of machines where weights are on a track or rails and are
lifted by levers or pulleys.
Unsaturated fat -
These are 'good' fats. They are called unsaturated because they have one or
more open spots on their carbon skeletons. This category of fats includes the
essential fatty acids linoleic and linolenic. The main sources of these fats are fromm plant foods, such as safflower, sunflower, arid
flaxseed oils.
Upper Abs -
Abbreviation for abdominal muscles above navel.
Variable Resistance -
Strength training equipment where the machine varies amount of weight being
lifted to match strength curve for a particular exercise-usually with a cam,
lever arm or hydraulic cylinder. Also referred to as "ACCOMMODATING
RESISTANCE."
Vascularity -
Increase in size and number of observable veins. Highly desirable in
bodybuilding.
Veining - See
VASCULARITY.
Vitamins -
Organic compounds that are vital to Tile, indispensable to bodily function,
and needed in minute amounts. They are calorie-free essential nutrients. Many
of them function as coenzymes. supporting a
multitude of biological functions.
Warm-up - The
10-15-minute session of light calisthenics, aerobic exercise, and stretching
taken prior to handling heavy bodybuilding training movements. A good warm-up
helps to prevent injuries and actually allows you to get more out of your
training than if you went into a workout totally cold.
Weight - The
same as Poundage or Resistance.
Weight Class - In
order for bodybuilders to compete against men of similar size, the IFBB has
instituted weight classes for all amateur competition. The normal men's
weight classes are 70 kilograms (kg), 154 pounds (lbs); 80 kg, 176 lbs; 90
kg, 198 lbs; and over 90 kg. In a minority of competitions, particularly in
the Far East, one additional class 65 kg, or 143 lbs is also contested.
Weightlifting - The
competitive form of weight training in which each athlete attempts to lift as
much as he can in well-defined exercises. Olympic lifting and power lifting
are the two types of weightlifting competition.
Weight Training Belt -
Thick leather belt used to support lower back. Used while doing squats,
military presses, dead lifts, bent rowing, etc
Workout - A
bodybuilding or weight-training session. |