Swordsmanship

/ˈsɔːrdzmənʃɪp/ noun

Definition

Skill and technique in using a sword for fighting; the art and practice of sword combat.

Etymology

From 'swordsman' (swords + man) plus '-ship' (suffix meaning the practice or skill of). 'Sword' comes from Old English 'sweord,' from Proto-Germanic.

Kelly Says

Swordsmanship had entire schools and strict codes of honor, and Olympic fencing is its direct descendant—today we've preserved 500 years of fighting technique in a sport, making fencers the last true swordsmen.

Ethical Language Guidance

Gender History

Swordsmanship uses -manship suffix, gendering skilled combat as male by default. Women warriors, fencers, and martial artists are historically erased from this terminology.

Inclusive Usage

Use 'swordsmanship' for general skill, but acknowledge women practitioners. For new contexts, 'sword skill', 'fencing', or 'bladework' are gender-neutral alternatives.

Inclusive Alternatives

["swordplay","bladework","fencing skill","sword skill"]

Empowerment Note

Women have been master swordspeople across cultures (e.g., Japanese onna-bugeisha, historical female duelists) and dominated modern Olympic fencing; legacy terminology obscures their contributions.

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