cross-legged sitting - traduction vers allemand
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cross-legged sitting - traduction vers allemand

HUMAN RESTING POSITION; BODY WEIGHT IS SUPPORTED PRIMARILY BY THE BUTTOCKS IN CONTACT WITH THE GROUND OR A HORIZONTAL OBJECT SUCH AS A CHAIR
Sit; Criss cross applesauce; List of sitting styles; Criss-cross applesauce; Standard sitting position; Cross-legged sitting; Cross-legged; Cross legged; Tailor's position; Tailors position; Indian style; Pretzel-style; Pretzel style; Sitting disease; Health risks of sitting
  • A woman sitting on a chair
  • A man sitting on the ground, on a road in Nepal
  • An [[India]]n [[Buddha]], seated with legs crossed
  • Women reclining in chairs. Painting by [[Jean-François de Troy]].
  •  ''[[The Thinker]]'' by [[Auguste Rodin]]
  • [[Back]] of a sitting nude by school of [[Rembrandt]]
  • The [[Japanese tea ceremony]] is performed sitting in [[seiza]].

cross-legged sitting         
beinüberkreuzt sitzen
cross-legged         
Beine gekreuzt, überschlagen
Beine gekreuzt      
cross-legged, sitting with one leg crossed over the other

Définition

cross-legged
¦ adjective & adverb (of a seated person) with the legs crossed at the ankles and the knees bent outwards.

Wikipédia

Sitting

Sitting is a basic action and resting position in which the body weight is supported primarily by the bony ischial tuberosities with the buttocks in contact with the ground or a horizontal surface such as a chair seat, instead of by the lower limbs as in standing, squatting or kneeling. When sitting, the torso is more or less upright, although sometimes it can lean against other objects for a more relaxed posture.

Sitting for much of the day may pose significant health risks, with one study suggesting people who sit regularly for prolonged periods may have higher mortality rates than those who do not. The average person sits down for 4.7 hours per day, according to a global review representing 47% of the global adult population.

The form of kneeling where the buttocks sit back on the heels, for example as in the Seiza and Vajrasana postures, is also often interpreted as sitting.