Fitness Glossary
A
Abdominals or "abs"
- Part of your core musculature; these muscles along with the back muscles give you the ability to support yourself upright. They are involved in most every activity you do.

Abductors
- Muscles that extend the limbs away from the body.

Absolute Strength
- The maximum amount a person can lift in one repetition.

Active Stretch
- Muscles are stretched using the contraction of the opposing muscle, (antagonist). For an example stretching the triceps, requires the biceps to contract.

Adductors
- muscles that bring the limbs closer to the body for example the inner thigh and the lats.

Aerobic Exercise
- Aerobic exercise is the process of producing energy with oxygen in the bloodstream. By products are carbon dioxide and water (breathing and perspiration). It's great for burning fat and strengthening your heart and lungs.

Anabolic Threshold
- Point at which lactic acid (a byproduct of glycosis) begins to build up faster you’re your vascular system can remove it from the muscles.

Anaerobic
- Energy is produced without oxygen, usually because the exercise intensity is such that the heart and lungs can't get enough oxygen to the muscles. Anaerobic exercise creates a byproduct called lactic acid, which builds up in the muscles and causes soreness and fatigue.

Antioxidants
- Substances such as Vitamins A, C and E and minerals such as copper, magnesium and zinc. Believed to destroy free radicals, which some scientists think may not only accelerate aging but also contribute to the formation of cancers and cataracts.

Asana
- The term for any of the many poses done in yoga.

Atrophy
- Decrease in size and functionality of tissue or organs; often used to describe muscles in an extended state of non-use.

B
Ballistic Stretch A more vigorous stretch by using a swinging or bouncing motion suited only for highly conditioned athletes; used in martial arts and explosive type sports.

Barbell
- Weights attached to a long bar which requires both hands to pick up.

Bicep
- The muscle running along the inside of the upper arm, which bends your arm at the elbow.

Biomechanics
- The study of the mechanics of muscular activity.

Body fat - The percentage of your body mass that is not composed of lean muscle, water, bones or vital organs.

Bone density
Soundness of the bones within the body, low density can be a result of osteoporosis and lead to stress fractures.

Burnout
- State of being bored or tired with exercise, frequently the result of over training or unvaried workouts. Cross training and rest are good remedies for burnout.

C
Cardiovascular System - The heart, lungs and vascular system.

Cardiovascular Training -
Physical conditioning that strengthens heart, lungs and vascular system, resulting in an increase in the ability of your body to utilize fuel more effectively resulting in a greater level of exercising.

Cholesterol -
A fat (lipid) which has both good and bad implications within the human body. Good being known as HDL and bad being LDL. Bad cholesterol is associated with heart disease and stroke, whereas the body requires cholesterol for the production of many steroid hormones.

Cadence - The beat, time or measure of rhythmic motion or activity such as pedaling a bicycle. Your cadence is the speed of your pedaling.

Complex carbohydrates
- Starches, such as grains, breads, rice, pasta, vegetables and beans. They get their name from their complex, chainlike structure. During digestion, starches are typically broken down into sugars and used by the body for energy. Complex carbohydrates offer you more sustained energy levels than simple carbohydrates.

Cool-down - Slowing down at the end of a workout to allow your body temperature and heart rate to decrease gradually.

Creatinine
- A proteinlike substance manufactured by your muscles (but also found in some meats) that has been found to increase athletic performance and delay fatigue. Gives the muscles strength and a greater ability to do high-intensity exercise such as sprinting. Also helps buffer the lactic acid that accumulates during high-intensity exercise.

Cross-training
- Mixing different activities into your regular workout routine to avoid overuse injuries and to prevent boredom. Cycling, running and swimming are 3 common activities used to cross-train different muscle groups.

D
Dehydration - The abnormal depletion of body fluids, easily detected by dark, concentrated urine. Prevented by drinking water or sports drinks before, during and after exercise. When you are fully hydrated, urine is plentiful, pale and odorless.

Deltoids or "delts"
- The triangular, 3-part muscles that wrap around the tops of the shoulders. They allow you to raise your arms forward, backward and out to the sides, and also rotate them inward and outward. Rowing, rock climbing and swimming work the deltoids.

Diet
- A regiment of foods eaten to obtain a goal. Some diets consist of just changes to what you eat, while some other diets require specialty food.

Diuretic -
A substance that aids the increase of urine excreted by the body; for example coffee.

Dumbbell
- weights attached to a short bar that can be held in one hand. Often used in pairs.

E
Eccentric Contraction - Muscle lengthens while maintaining tension.

Electrolytes
- Minerals such as sodium, potassium, calcium and magnesium that act to keep your nerves firing and muscles moving, especially during exercise. They are lost through sweating and can be replaced by drinking sports/energy drinks.

Endorphins
- Any of a group of proteins with potent analgesic properties that occur naturally in the brain. These are the brain chemicals that contribute to the "runner's high" or good feelings during and after exercise.

External obliques
- Muscles running diagonally downward and inward from the lower ribs to the pelvis that allow you to bend forward and twist at the waist. These lie on top of the internal obliques. The kayaking stroke uses these muscles much more than the arms.

F
Fartlek - Swedish for "speed play," a type of loosely structured interval training for runners, cyclists, and in-line skaters. It combines high-intensity segments with your regular training pace in order to build strength and speed.

Fast Twitch Muscles -
Muscle cells that fire quickly and are utilized in anaerobic activities such as sprinting and power lifting.

Flexibility
- The range of motion around a joint. This can be increased with stretching, training functionally, practicing martial arts and yoga.

Free weights
-. Barbells and dumbbells are free weights in a gym, a gallon of milk, your child or a bowling ball are free weights in everyday life; they use their mass and gravity as the source of resistance. 

G

Glucose - A sugar, the usual form in which carbohydrates are assimilated by the body.

Gluteus maximus, medius and minimus or "glutes"
- The 3 muscles of the buttocks and hips that extend your thighs forward and to the side (abduction) and rotate your legs at the hips. Walking, running and climbing all work the gluteus maximus. Side movements such as skating or dance work the abductors.

Glycemic Index (GI)
A measuring system to find the extent of which various foods raise the blood sugar. The benchmark is white bread, which has a GI of 100. The higher the score, the greater the extents of blood sugar raise. E.g. Dextrose scores 138 (HIGH) whereas fructose 31 (LOW).

Glycogen
- The form carbohydrates take when stored in the muscles.

H
Hamstrings - The group of 3 muscles on the back of your thighs that runs from the lower part of the pelvis to just below the knees. They allow you to bend your knees and straighten your legs at the hips. Climbing, hiking uphill, running and cycling all work the hamstrings.

High Density Lipoprotein (HDL)
A blood substance that picks up cholesterol and helps remove it from the body; often called "GOOD CHOLESTEROL."

Hypertension
High blood pressure.

Hypertrophy
Increase in size of muscle fiber.

I
Incomplete Proteins - Proteins which are low in one or more of the essential amino acids.

Internal Obliques
- Muscles that run upward and inward from the hip bones to the lower ribs, allowing you to rotate and bend at the waist. These are located underneath the external obliques. These muscles are used when you paddle a kayak.

Intervals
- Breaking up an exercise into a series of work and rest periods.

Isokinetic Exercise
- Using resistance that maintains a fixed speed throughout the range of motion

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.

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.

K
Kinesiology - the study of the principles ofmechanics and anatomy in relation to human movement.

L
Lactic acid (lactate) - A byproduct of anaerobic (or high-intensity) exercise that collects in the muscles and causes soreness, stiffness and fatigue.

Latissimus dorsi or "lats"
- the pair of fan-shaped muscles across your middle and lower back that attach the arms to the spine. They work to pull your arms down and back, and give you good posture when they are toned. Rock climbing, swimming and rowing all use these muscles.

Ligament
- A flexible, non-elastic tissue that connects bone to bone. For example, the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) of the knee connects the kneecap to the femur (thigh) and the tibia (shin). Ligament injuries can be sprains or tears.

M
Metabolism - Energy production and utilization.

Muscular Endurance - The ability to sustain muscular contractions.

N
Nutrition - The sum of the processes by which an animal or plant takes in and utilizes food.

O
Osteoporosis - A condition that affects especially older women and is characterized by decrease in bone mass with decreased density and enlargement of bone spaces producing porosity and fragility.

P
Pectorals or "pecs" - The 2 pairs of muscles in the chest that work to pull the upper arms toward or across the chest. The pectoralis major covers the chest from the top of the arm to the collarbone, down to the sternum and upper 6 ribs. The smaller pectoralis minor is located underneath, and runs from mid-chest to shoulder blade. Push-ups work the pecs!

Perceived exertion
- The level of intensity you feel your body is exerting during exercise on a scale of 0 to 10. An unscientific way of staying within your target heart rate zone.

Proteins - A molecule made up of amino acids that are needed for the body to function properly. Proteins are the basis of body structures such as skin and hair and of substances such as enzymes and antibodies.

Pyruvate - A nutritional supplement that has been found to enhance athletic performance and possibly aid in burning fat.

Q
Quadriceps or "quads" - The group of 4 muscles that make up the front of the thigh. Quads straighten the knee, and keeping them strong can help prevent knee injuries. Cycling, skiing, running and hiking downhill work these muscles.

R
Rectus abdominis - The muscle extending the entire length of the abdomen, from the lower 3 ribs to the top of the pubic bone (below the navel). Works to keep you upright and lets you bend at the waist. Strengthening this muscle can help prevent lower back pain.

Recumbent bike
- A bicycle on which you sit in a reclined position with your back supported and your feet out in front. It can be an indoor, stationary-type or a moving, outdoor-style bike. It works the buttocks and hamstrings more than upright bicycles, and unlike uprights, supports the back.

Repetition or "rep"
- A single movement, as in doing one squat. This is going down and then going back up. For toning, strength and endurance, do more reps at a lower weight.

Resistive cuffs and boots
- Foam buoyancy devices placed on the ankles and/or wrists to create extra resistance for water aerobics and water running. Shown to increase workout intensity up to 5 times.

Rhomboids
- The muscles that pull your shoulder blades inward. They attach to the vertebrae at the base of the neck and go diagonally to the inside edges of the shoulder blades.

R.I.C.E.
- The formula for treating an injury such as a strain or sprain. The acronym stands for Rest, Ice, Compression and Elevation.

S
Set - A number of repetitions of a movement, such as an arm curl or a squat. A set may have 8 reps, for example.

Shin splints
- The generic term for pain in the front of the lower leg. Most often caused by inflamantion of the tendons (tendinitis), which can result when the tendons are subjected to too much force or repeatedly overstretched. Running or walking on hard surfaces can contribute.

Simple carbohydrates
- Sugars, such as fructose, glucose, maple syrup and honey. So called because their chemical makeup consists of only 1 or 2 units as opposed to complex carbohydrates, which contain many.

Slip-lasted
- Shoe construction made by sewing the upper into a sock, which is then glued directly to the mid- and outsole without any board in between. These are flexible shoes with lots of cushioning and little motion control and are ideal for the underpronater. Learn how to choose running shoes.

Spinning
- The Spinning program utilizes a revolutionary stationary bike, the Johnny G. Spinner by Schwinn, which is designed to simulate a real outdoor biking experience. There are no computers attached to the Spinner, and the bike has a fixed gear, racing handlebars, pedals with clips or cages, and a seat that can adjust up and down, fore and aft. Each Spinner also has a resistance knob that you can use to adjust the intensity of each workout.

Sprain
- An injury to the ligament.

Static stretch - A simple muscle stretch that goes just to the point of gentle tension and is held steadily for several seconds without moving or bouncing.

Strain - An injury to the tendon or muscle.

Straight last
- Shoe construction with a straight shaped sole. A straight last is appropriate for the overpronater with a flexible, flat arch. It helps to control inward motion. Learn how to choose running shoes.

Stretch reflex
- A protective, involuntary nerve reaction that causes muscles to contract. Bouncing or overstretching can trigger the reflex in which muscles are trying to protect themselves from damage.

T
Target heart rate - The ideal intensity level at which your heart is being exercised but not overworked. Determined by finding your maximum heart rate and taking a percentage (60% to 85%,  of it).

Tendon
- A flexible, non-elastic tissue that connects muscle to bone. The Achilles tendon is the large connector from the heel bone into the calf muscle.

Tether
- Attached to a belt and then to a ladder or some other fixed point at poolside, a tether helps you turn a too-small pool into a swimmer's treadmill. For example, you can have a great workout in a hotel pool or any other pool that's too small for laps.

Trapezius or "traps"
- The triangular muscles stretching across your back from the spine to the shoulder blades and collarbone. They work with the deltoids to lift your arms and shoulders. Good to have strong ones for carrying a backpack!
Triceps - The muscles on the back of the upper arms that straighten your elbows and allow you to push your arms forward. You use them when you're fly-fishing or pushing a running stroller.

V
Vastus intermedius, lateralis and medialis - 3 of the 4 muscles of the thigh that make up the quadriceps. Strong quads help protect your knees. The 4th muscle is the rectus femoris. Cycling, skiing, running and hiking downhill work these muscles!

VO2 max
- The largest volume of oxygen your body can take in and assimilate. This figure is very high in trained endurance athletes.

W
Warm-up - Slow, controlled exercise at the beginning of a workout to warm muscles; increase heart rate, blood pressure and body temperature.Prepares the body for the upcoming activity.

Water dumbbells/water barbells
- Flotation devices shaped like paddles that provide extra resistance to your arm muscles when used underwater. They can also be used to hold you at the surface for back and leg exercises.

Weight-bearing exercise
- Simply refers to the action of supporting ones own weight.  Weight-bearing exercise (such as running, skiing or walking) can help slow down the rate of bone loss and osteoporosis, and therefore reduce fractures.

Y
Yoga - A system of exercises for attaining bodily or mental control and well-being. Various forms of yoga include poses (or asanas) for building strength and flexibility, breathing exercises for cleansing, and/or meditation for relaxation and stress reduction.
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Fitness Glossary