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Asal Usul Osom !

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Post time 26-10-2010 10:16 AM | Show all posts |Read mode
korang tau tak mano datangnyo permainan osom ni ? ala . yang ado burung, air & batu tu . tak sumo tompek pakai namo osom ni. ado yg panggil obejus tu, one two jus la apo la .
den pueh dah search merato tompek . tapi tak ponah ado artikel pasai bondo ni.
apo yg polik eh bondo ni mano2 negaro pun pakai.
jadi ado sapo2 kek sini yg buleh menerangkan pasai bondo ni ?
terimo kaseh pado yg memberi feedback .
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Post time 26-10-2010 10:22 AM | Show all posts
Mog,ekau eby yus ke?
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 Author| Post time 26-10-2010 10:29 AM | Show all posts
Reply 2# salimrock

bukan2 . den komba dio yo
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Post time 26-10-2010 10:50 AM | Show all posts
ooo kau la yang letak gambar suh orang compare tu ye?
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Post time 26-10-2010 10:56 AM | Show all posts
alalala...ekau mog..malu lak org panggil ko eby yus...suko la tu
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 Author| Post time 26-10-2010 11:04 AM | Show all posts
Reply 4# pawangBuaya


   hahaha . mano ado mano ado (memalu)
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 Author| Post time 26-10-2010 11:04 AM | Show all posts
Reply 5# martiena


   suko ya hamat !!!
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Post time 26-10-2010 11:05 AM | Show all posts
awat ko macam bengang orang compare ko ngn eby yus tp ko pakai gak gambar die??

baguih la ko buka thread ni, gua pon nak tau gak asal usul one two jus ni.
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 Author| Post time 26-10-2010 11:09 AM | Show all posts
Reply 8# guablur7


   den mulo suko gelaran tu ? hihihihih . ok . stret tu de point . sapo yg tau pasai osom ni ? copek la koba !!!
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Post time 26-10-2010 11:20 AM | Show all posts
ader gak tempat yang tukarkan burung tuh ngan gunting.......ini mainan org asia kot.....sbab citer dragon ball dari Jepun tu pon ader bende nih hehehehe.....

Saya raser ini cara cikgu martial art nak ingatkan murid dia tentang 3 jenis serangan tangan dan cara bertahan. Contoh:

1)Biler orang tumbuk(batu) kita tangkap(air)
2)biler orang orang tampar(air) kita tujah(burung)
3)biler orang tujah(burung) kiter tumbuk(batu)

Begitulah gamaknye.....
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 Author| Post time 26-10-2010 11:24 AM | Show all posts
Reply 10# shahaizat


   mmg la . cite katun jepon mmg byk bnde ni . tp cmne pgaruh die boleh smpai ke tnah melayu ? sedangkan melayu tak main kungfu/shaulin ni
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Post time 26-10-2010 11:25 AM | Show all posts
Reply  shahaizat


   mmg la . cite katun jepon mmg byk bnde ni . tp cmne pgaruh die boleh smpai ...
m0g Post at 26-10-2010 11:24



    Kalu mende nih asal dari Cina logiklar  sbab kungfu org cina asal cam nih. Lagipon cina mmg dah lamer datang kat tanah Melayu nih...
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 Author| Post time 26-10-2010 11:30 AM | Show all posts
Reply 12# shahaizat


   ade penerangan yg lebih specific atau lebih detail ??
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Post time 26-10-2010 11:47 AM | Show all posts
Reply 7# m0g


    soba jo la den ngan ekau ni yo....
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Post time 26-10-2010 11:54 AM | Show all posts
Post Last Edit by shahaizat at 26-10-2010 11:58

Rock-paper-scissors is a hand game played by two or more people. The game is known by many names, including fargling, cachi-pún, burung-batu-air ("bird-stone-water"), jan-ken-pon, janken kauwi-bauwi-bo, камень-ножницы-бумага and rochambeau.
The game is often used as a selection method in a way similar to coin flipping, drawing straws, or throwing dice . However, unlike truly random selection methods, rock-paper-scissors can be played with a degree of skill, especially if the game extends over many sessions with the same players; it is often possible to recognize and exploit the non-random behavior of an opponent.
Game play


Each of the three basic hand-signs (from left to right: rock, paper, and scissors) beats one of the other two, and loses to the other.



A man and a girl playing rock-paper-scissors



The players count aloud to three, or speak the name of the game (e.g. "Rock! Paper! Scissors!" or "Ro! Cham! Beau!"), each time raising one hand in a fist and swinging it down on the count. On the third count (saying, "Scissors!" or "Beau!"), the players change their hands into one of three gestures, which they then "throw" by extending it towards their opponent. Variations include a version where players use a fourth count — "Shoot!" — before throwing their gesture, or a version where they only shake their hands twice before "throwing." Others prefer a five count cadence by saying "Says Shoot!" before throwing their gesture. The gestures are:
  • Rock, represented by a clenched fist.
  • Scissors, represented by the index and middle fingers extended and separated (or in South Korea, by the thumb and index finger extended).
  • Paper, represented by an open hand, with the fingers connected (horizontal).

The objective is to select a gesture which defeats that of the opponent. Gestures are resolved as follows:
  • Rock blunts or breaks scissors: that is, rock defeats scissors
  • Scissors cut paper: scissors defeats paper
  • Paper covers, sands or captures rock: paper defeats rock

If both players choose the same gesture, the game is tied and the players throw again. There are many different ways to use this game, but in South Korea it is most likely used for descending staircases such as the picture above on the right. Two people stand at a stairway, and the person who wins in the game gets to go down one step. They continue this routine until they reach the end of the stairway, and the person who gets to the end first wins. Rock-paper-scissors is also used for choosing who will be the "chaser" or "it" for playing things such as hide-and-seek and tag.
History



According to Xie Zhaozhe's(谢肇淛) book ‘’Wuzazu(五杂组)‘’in Chinese Ming dynasty period,the game could date back to the time of Chinese Han dynasty,it is called 手势令), Li rihua(李日华)'s book Note of Liuyanzhai(六砚斋笔记)also reveals this game,call it shoushiling(手势令) or huozhitou(豁指头) or huoquan(豁拳).In the 18th century these games were popular in Japan.  The Japanese people invented Janken(Rock-paper-scissors) in the latter half of 19th century.As for Rock-paper-scissors came to be played all over the world in the 20th century. Jan-ken-pon, or more commonly janken  often transliterated in other ways such as jack-en-poy (tagalog), janken-po, etc., sometimes called rock ken , and known as rock-paper-scissors or paper-scissors-stone in the English-speaking world. The origin or the derivation of the name is unknown. ken  is a fist in Japanese and Jan-ken-po is categorized as a "ken (fist) games" . Janken is believed to have been based on two older ken games, sū ken (数拳, number competing game with fingers) and san sukumi ken (三すくみ拳, san sukumi means the freezing aspects of a snake, frog, and slug with fear). San sukumi ken has existed in Japan since ancient times, and sū ken was imported from China in the late 17th century; the name in China of sū ken is shǒushìlìng (手勢令). Ken games began to increase in popularity in the middle of the 19th century.
Cultural references
Because of its widespread use, the game has received substantial references in popular culture. Many television series poke fun at particular characters' incompetence at understanding the rules, or show how mischievous characters are often able to "win" the game by inventing new objects which beat all the others.
Variations
Players have developed numerous cultural and personal variations on the game, from simply playing the same game with different objects, to expanding into more weapons and rules.
  • Rock-paper-scissors is frequently played in a "best two out of three" match, and in many cases psych-outs, shouting, and trick gestures are performed to confuse or trick the other player into throwing an illegal toss resulting in a loss. Some players prefer to shout the name of a throw they do not intend to throw in order to misdirect and confuse their opponent. It generally applies that what is thrown is what is officially counted in the match. For instance, yelling Scissors or Paper, and actually throwing Rock. The rock is what is judged and tallied. During tournaments, players often prepare their sequence of three gestures prior to the tournament's commencement.
  • Only rock and paper can be used in an elimination or odd-man-out match. The chant can be "ぐっぱでくんでもおこりなし", "gupa de kundemo okorinashi", (Translated: rock-paper groups you, don't get mad.
  • A variation found in Indonesia is composed of an earwig, a human, and an elephant. The earwig is able to climb into the elephant's ear and drive it insane, while the human crushes the earwig and the elephant crushes the human.
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 Author| Post time 26-10-2010 11:54 AM | Show all posts
Reply 14# martiena


   relax la poit . den tak buek apo2 kesalahan pon
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Post time 26-10-2010 11:54 AM | Show all posts
Post Last Edit by shahaizat at 26-10-2010 12:00

Additional weapons
With an odd number of choices, each beats half the weapons and loses to half the weapons. No even number of weapons can be made balanced, unless some pairs of weapons result in a draw; there will always be some weapons superior to others.
An example of an unbalanced four-weapon game adds "dynamite" as a trump. Dynamite, expressed as the extended index finger or thumb, always defeats rock, but is defeated by scissors. The paper-dynamite relationship is disputed; using it as a trump generally implies that "dynamite shreds paper," but there are those who claim that the paper would supposedly smother the fuse. Because of this dispute (and the potential unfair advantage that would result), organized rock-paper-scissors contests never use dynamite. A game theory analysis would eliminate one of the four symbols for being a strategy strictly dominated, and the resulting game would be isomorph to the original rock, paper, scissor (i.e., only a symbol's name would change).



Resolution and gesture diagrams for Rock, Paper, Scissors, Lizard, Spock


Similarly, the French game "pierre, papier, ciseaux, puits" (rock, paper, scissors, well) is unbalanced; both the rock and scissors fall in the well and lose to it, while paper covers both rock and well. This means two "weapons", well and paper, can defeat two moves, while the last two weapons can only defeat one of the other three choices.
One popular five-weapon expansion, claimed to have been invented by Sam Kass and Karen Bryla,[9] adds "Spock" and "lizard" to the standard three. "Spock" is signified with the Star Trek Vulcan salute, while "lizard" is shown by forming the hand into a sock-puppet-like mouth. Spock smashes scissors and vaporizes rock; he is poisoned by lizard and disproved by paper. Lizard poisons Spock and eats paper; it is crushed by rock and decapitated by scissors. This variant was mentioned in a 2005 article of The Times,[10] and appeared in an episode of the sitcom The Big Bang Theory, "The Lizard-Spock Expansion," in 2008. As long as the number of moves is an odd number and that each move defeats exactly half of the other moves while being defeated by the other half, any combinations of moves will function as a game. For example, a 101-move version exists.[11]
Jan Ken Pon


Usually, though not always, the game starts by both players chanting "Saisho wa gū!" (最初はぐう!, "Starting with the stone!") while pumping their fists to synchronize the moves.
They repeat the same pumping while chanting "Jan-ken-pon!" On "pon", the players display their hand gestures and resolve them according to standard Rock-Paper-Scissors rules.
Chants
"Jan-ken-pon!" is the chant commonly said when playing the game in Japan. Depending on region, however, the chant can change. Sometimes, instead of "pon," players shout "hoi!" or "poi!" i.e., "Jan-ken-HOI!" or "Jan-ken-POI!" Phrases that sound nothing like "janken" are also used, for example "JikketTA!" In Kansai, it's not uncommon to hear the chant "in-jan-HOI!" Initially, when players tie, the chant is "aiko deSHO!," with players revealing their play at "sho!" But when players begin to tie continuously, the chant is often shortened to simply "-sho," rapidly changing the play each time. i.e., "aiko deSHO! -SHO! -SHO!". Play may continue even past this initial stage; a common secondary stage of the game is "Acchi Muite Hoi!". The players will chant "Acchi Muite Hoi" (Hey, Look over there!) and on "Hoi" the winner of the first stage will point either up, down, left or right, with the opponent tilting their head in one of these four directions. If the opponent tilts their head in the same direction as the finger, they lose again declaring previous stage's winner the overall winner. If not, the original winners win is cancelled and the game reverts back to "Jan-ken-pon".

wikipedia
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Post time 26-10-2010 11:55 AM | Show all posts
kire asal dari cina lar....
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 Author| Post time 26-10-2010 11:56 AM | Show all posts
Reply 17# shahaizat


   den suko org mcm ekau ni . baguih . tp den tgh pahamkan apo yg dimaksudkan ni . ape2 pun tq yo  .
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Post time 26-10-2010 12:01 PM | Show all posts
nak lagi detail baca terus kat wikipedia......tapi mende nih pon takkonpem gak.....
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