Ice skating as a game has existed for a considerable length of time but the present interpretation of the game has just been around since the mid-nineteenth century. A Treatise on Skating (1772) by Englishman Robert Jones is the primary known record of figure skating. Rivalries were then held in the “English style” of skating, which was hardened and formal and looks somewhat like present day figure skating. American skater Jackson Haines, who was viewed as the “father of current figure skating”, presented another style of skating in the mid-1860s. This style fused free and expressive procedures.
As figure skating developed to be received by the majority of the world, there were enormous assortments of terms authored to allude to sort the endless moves. We should investigate the absolute most imperative terms.
Axel hop – a bounce in skating from the forward outside cutting edge of one skate to the regressive outside edge of the other, with (at least one) and a half turns noticeable all around.
Chassé – a skimming venture in ice moving in which one foot uproots the other.
Mandatory – an occasion in aggressive figure skating comprising of an arrangement of required moves or components.
Free skate – an occasion in focused figure skating that is set to music and has no required components.
Kilian – a quick ice move executed by a couple of skaters next to each other which was first performed in 1909.
Lutz – a hop in skating from the retrogressive outside edge of one skate to the regressive outside edge of the other, with at least one full turns noticeable all around.
Quad – (additionally fourfold) four turns in a skating bounce.
Salchow – a bounce in which the skater takes off from within back edge of one skate and terrains, after a total turn, outwardly back edge of the other.