Guzuri, Jira and Naburi: Difference between revisions
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; {{nihongo|Guzuri|グズリ|Guzuri}}, {{nihongo|Jira|ジラ|Jira}}, and {{nihongo|Naburi|ナブリ|Naburi }} | |||
: Three bandits, led by [[Kogure]], who together practised {{nihongo|''[[Taizan-ryū Shisoku Ken]]''|泰山流四束拳|Mount Tai Four Coil Fist}}, a style where they attack the enemy in tandem. They were part of a small bandit gang who murdered a chicken farmer and stole his livestock. [[Kenshirō]] hunted them down and avenged the farmer's death. | |||
[[File:Taizan.jpg|thumb|thumb|200px|The four of them in action.]] | [[File:Taizan.jpg|thumb|thumb|200px|The four of them in action.]] | ||
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==Gallery== | ==Gallery== | ||
<gallery captionalign="left"> | <gallery captionalign="left"> | ||
guzuri.JPG|Guzuri | guzuri.JPG|Guzuri | ||
jiira.JPG|Jira | jiira.JPG|Jira |
Revision as of 18:11, 25 June 2011
- Guzuri (グズリ Guzuri), Jira (ジラ Jira), and Naburi (ナブリ Naburi)
- Three bandits, led by Kogure, who together practised Taizan-ryū Shisoku Ken (泰山流四束拳 Mount Tai Four Coil Fist), a style where they attack the enemy in tandem. They were part of a small bandit gang who murdered a chicken farmer and stole his livestock. Kenshirō hunted them down and avenged the farmer's death.
Gallery
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Guzuri
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Jira
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Naburi