swimming vocabularyThis glossary for swim students is in two sections: this page of basic swimming vocabulary
and another page of vocabulary to be able to understand workouts (Swim workout vocabulary).
At De Anza we teach all levels of swimming, from people who are afraid to get into a pool to
quite advanced swimmers working on long distances for ocean races. Some of my students in
the college introduction to swimming class, novice swimming, have literally never been in a
pool before, others swim a mile a day. This glossary will attempt to explain things to all.
basic swimming vocabulary
Swimming can be done at the surface on your stomach, back or side, as well as underwater.
The strokes (methods of swimming) used in competitions are:
Butterfly or fly (these names are used interchangeably by most swimmers)
is swum on the
stomach, and uses a pull (arm motion) of both arms at once, and a kick (leg motion) of both legs
at once. The kick is called a dolphin kick.
Backstroke, racing backstroke, or back crawl (these names are also used interchangeably by
most swimmers) is the fastest stroke swum on the back. The arms alternate their pull and the legs
alternate their kick. This kick is called a flutter kick.
Breaststroke
uses a pull with both arms at once, and the arms stay in the water. Likewise both
legs kick at the same time using a frog kick, modified frog kick or whip kick. This was the main
stroke for competition in the 1800s, before freestyle was developed. See: History of swimming section.
Freestyle, free, front crawl or forward crawl (these names are used interchangeably by most
swimmers) is the fastest stroke, and the one you will most often see people on their stomach
doing. The arms alternate on the pull and come all the way out of the water. People who swim
freestyle well do not lift their heads to get a breath, but only turn towards the side. Australian
Crawl and/or American crawl refer to developments as the stroke became faster in the early
1900s.
Also at swim races, the Individual Medley (IM) is swum by one person versus other individual
swimmers, with the strokes above, in the order described above. Sometimes the names are
shortened to Fly, Back, Breast, Free. The same distance of each is swum, totaling 100 yards, 200
yards/meters or 400 yards/meters.
A relay is swim by four members of the same team against four members of each other team at a
race. A freestyle relay would have each swim a distance of freestyle, and as they get to
the side of the pool, the next person in the relay dives in and starts swimming the same stroke/distance. A
medley relay would have four swimmers each do one distance of the IM strokes in the order
Back, Breast, Fly, Free. A leg is one section of a relay. The anchor is the last swimmer in a relay.
Recreational strokes include all of the competitive strokes (but any of these can be used in a 'fun'
competition) and
Sidestroke is swum on the right or left side. The leading arm pulls from in front of the swimmer
down to about chest level, the other arm starts the pull just above where the first arm finishes and
pulls down to the hips. The kick is called a scissors kick as it resembles scissors closing.
Elementary backstroke, a slow, resting stroke. Both arms stay in the water and pull at once
along the sides of the swimmer. A whip kick, dolphin, flutter or frog kick is used.
Dog Paddle is a human swimming like a dog. Panting is not required.
Trudgen Crawl is freestyle arm pull with a sidestroke scissors kick, sometimes with some
flutter kick as well.
Drowning moth is what a swimmer's first attempt at butterfly often looks like.
Underwater swimming has a pull much the same as breaststroke but pulling all the way down
the side of or under the swimmer. Many different kicks are used.
Treading water is not a stroke. It is a set of leg actions and arm actions used to keep a
swimmer's head above the water while the body is vertical, (as opposed to swimming, when the
body is horizontal). Water polo players depend entirely on the leg action/strength when their
hands are busy handling the ball. Lifeguards depend entirely on their leg action when, for
example, they are strapping a victim to a backboard in deep water. The leg action can be a
scissors kick, whip kick or an eggbeater (the legs move much as a hand-powered egg beater
does). A flutter kick is not effective for treading water. The hand motion, when it is used, is
sculling. It can be compared to spreading frosting on a giant birthday cake. By properly waving
the hands back and forth through the water, the swimmer creates a force perpendicular to the
direction of motion. Swimmers who are used to sculling automatically (it seems as if they do not
need to think about it) make small changes in the pitch and/or speed of their hand movement to
adjust the force as needed to stay in one place, turn or move. Sculling can be used alone to help
maintain a steady position and/or horizontal position in the water during a float. Synchronized
swimming, the water ballet performed by a single swimmer, by pairs or groups of up to eight swimmers, depends in part on strong sculling
skills. Sculls include the flat, head-first, feet-first, canoe, torpedo and support scull.
Hypoxic training is a workout with limited breathing and therefore a limited intake of oxygen. No hypoxic training or attempts at lengthy breath holding are allowed in my classes without permission and an instructor or lifeguard watching you.
The story of a Navy Seal who drowned in a city pool is at Can I use a De Anza swim class or lifeguard training to get ready for Navy Seals or Marines training? by way of a warning about breath holding practices.
There are many kinds of diving. Dives are head-first (or rather, for safety the hands enter first)
entries into water. Some of my novice swimmers mistakenly refer to jumping feet first into a
pool as a dive, but it is not.
Surface dives are used to get from the surface of the water to underwater. They are usually done
feet first or involve a somersault head first.
Springboard diving (formerly fancy diving) uses a diving board.
The diving boards at De Anza are one meter and three meter, the distance from the board to the
surface of the water. We also have two platforms, one five meters from the water surface and
one ten meters.
Some pools also have one and 7 meter platforms. Diving boards and platforms
are referred to as apparatus. The use of any board or platform is with permission only at most
pools and in most swim classes.
Other standard diving board rules include:
only one person on the board at a time
dive straight out from the end of the board
swim only to the closest ladder or wall or to the designated ladder or wall - not back under the board or in front of another board
dives involving a handstand or seat drop are not allowed at most pools
hands should enter the water first on headfirst dives
no running on the board- you could go out farther than is safe and hit a swimmer, lane line, the side or the slope of the pool
no sitting or gymnastics on the guardrails
Diving vocabulary: Most boards have a fulcrum, a wheel along the side that can be used to
adjust the stability/stiffness of the board.
The takeoff may be facing forward or backward. Each
forward dive has a moving start, with an approach (at least three slow steps as the diver walks
to the end of the board) and hurdle (the jump at the end of the board). The press is the diver's
downward push on the board, the lift is the force of the board pushing a diver unto the air.
Somersaults can be performed forward or backward. A twist is a rotation along the midline of
the body with the body straight. The position of a dive can be tuck (in a tight ball, bent at hips
and knees), pike (bent at hips with straight legs), or straight. When performing a twisting dive a
diver can use a free position, their choice of position. A ripped entry refers to when a diver enters the water without excessive splash.
The score on a dive in competition is determined by the degree of difficulty of the dive and the judge's scores.
A reader asked how deep water should be under a diving board. The answer can be found in the Red Cross Water Safety Instructor's manual, 2009. Minimum depth of water under a 1 meter diving board directly under the tip of the board should be 11 feet 6 inches. This book also notes that goggles should never be worn during teaching of head first entries.
The photo below is of a diving board with insufficient water depth under it:
Synchronized diving debuted in the 2000 Olympics. From the Red Cross: "In synchro diving,
two divers of the same gender perform the same or complementary dives from the same level
board. On the platform, divers take off from opposite sides of the platform. On the springboard,
divers take off from adjacent boards."
Racing dives or shallow dives are those from the side of the pool.
Only trained divers should try
these dives. They are not safe if done into water less than five feet deep. People should be taught in water that is at least nine feet deep.
They are also called
starts, as in a race, and come in various styles, such as grab starts and track starts. A backstroke
start is begun at the surface of the water, but the swimmer takes off momentarily into the air.
Mark, take your mark or on your mark is the command to swimmers to get into position for
the start of their race. Starting blocks are small raised platforms on the sides of pools, usually
one per lane, for starts. Untrained people are greatly at risk if they use them at shallow water.
A start can also refer to the starting (blank, not real) gun, buzzer, or beep / tone from a
computerized timing system that starts the swimmers in a race. Omega and Colorado are brands
of timing systems. A false start is when a swimmer leaves a starting block early or otherwise
starts a race before the horn or gun sounds. At many races one false start disqualifies a swimmer
from that race.
A dive done improperly can turn into a belly flop when a diver lands horizontally, on his
stomach instead of slipping into the water cleanly at an angle. It is usually caused when the diver
lifts his head, which is a common mistake, so belly flops are common.
The speed you reach when you dive from a springboard or platform is:
1 meter: ~ 0.45 sec to water; ~ 14.5 ft/sec or ~ 9.9 mph at contact
3 meter: ~ 0.78 sec to water; ~ 25.1 ft/sec or ~ 17.1 mph at contact
5 meter: ~ 1.0 sec to water; ~ 32.2 ft/sec or ~ 22mph at contact
10 meter: ~ 1.43 sec to water; ~ 46 ft/sec or ~ 31.4 mph at contact
Sparging systems are bubble machines for platform divers that create a mass of bubbles that
lessens the impact by as much as 80%.
A cannonball is an intentional entry for fun into the water, usually from a board, but also from
the side of the pool, with the person's body tucked into a ball as they hit the water. Cannonballs
can be used in a recreational competition and 'judged' by the height / width / symmetry of the
splash. A can opener is a variation with one leg pulled up to the body and the other straight.
Either can be aimed with the intention of splashing people on deck.
Turns are the word used to describe coming to the wall and reversing direction. Simple open
turns are usually the first taught. Flip turns are faster and require a somersault underwater. Swimmers sight on the 'T' painted on or in tiles on the bottom of the pool at the end of the lane to know when to start their flip turn.
General words to describe a pool:
Swimmers generally refer to the bottom of the pool when
they swim downwards, rather than the floor, which some of my novices call the bottom surface.
The depths at the bottom are usually marked along the edge or sides.
Some pools have a deep
end and a shallow end, and the bottom can slope gradually or suddenly from shallow to deep.
There is usually a line painted on the bottom and a floating line at the surface where there is a
sudden drop off. A diving well is a separate pool with only deep water. The diving well at De
Anza is 14 to 16 feet deep.
The flat area around the pool is usually called the deck , no matter what type of material it is
made of.
The vertical portion of the pool can be called the side or wall. Sometimes it has a touch pad to record times on a computer. Some pools have the water surface right at the top of the pool wall; others have a gutter that runs all the way around the pool circumference.
If you stand at the edge of the De Anza pool and look straight down you can see that the pool gutter sticks out farther than the deck edge. If you decide to jump in you need to be certain that you jump out far enough from the edge that you don't hit your tailbone on the gutter. Unfortunately people don't always look before they leap into a pool and sometimes have jumped on a swimmer underwater near the pool edge.
A bulkhead is a platform across the width of a pool that can be moved to change the length of a section of the pool. Swimming under a bulkhead to get from one section of a pool to another is usually against pool rules.
When people are swimming back and forth it is referred to as lap swimming.
To keep people from running into each other we use lines with plastic floats on them, called lane
lines,
formerly referred to sometimes as lifelines. They are also useful to calm the waves caused
by swimmers, thus improving speeds.
Lane lines should be used only for temporary support.
Reasons to not hang on the lane lines:
1) they break
2) lifeguard might think you are in trouble
3) no room for people who really are in trouble
4) submerges it so it can't be seen
(especially if it is a swim area boundary).
When the lane lines are set in the bigger De Anza pool across the width, the swimming is
sometimes referred to as short course. When they are set along the length, they are sometimes
referred to as long course.
When people share a lane with one other person they can each swim back and forth on one side of the lane. When more than two people share a lane they need to circle swim, each person swimming on the right hand side of the lane.
Flags are hung up in the air along the width and length of the pool, about 15 feet or 5 meters
from the wall. They are sometimes referred to as backstroke flags.
The ones at De Anza are in
the school colors, burgundy and gold, but they are not just for decoration, they are for people
swimming on their back to be able to look at and judge when they are coming near the wall (the
side of the pool) so they will not hit their head. Many advanced swimmers are able to start a turn
without actually seeing the wall, but just by counting the pulls of their stroke from the flags.
A lap on a track is one time around, but in a pool most people refer to
a lap as once across the pool. Some coaches and swimmers refer to lengths to avoid confusion.
Two lengths can also be referred to as down and back. A mile (5,280 feet) would be 70 1/2 widths
of the De Anza pool, or 70 1/2 laps. A mile is also slang for a 1500 meter or 1650 yard freestyle
race, both of which are not really a mile distance.
Floating idly in the pool can be quite pleasant. Relax and feel the sunshine on your back, stare at the bottom. But out of courtesy to others, so your instructor, coach, the lifeguard or other swimmers won't wonder if you are capable of holding your breath for a long time or if you have passed out, Any person who wants to float without moving should signal that they are okay
by giving a 'thumbs-up' signal. Even if others at the pool you are at are not familiar with this courtesy, they should be able to understand it.
Waterpolo goals are usually made of netting and a rectangular wood or plastic frame. Water polo is
a deep water soccer/rugby. In competition it is played by teams of either gender, but for fun
everyone often plays together. It evolved in the late 1800s from a mild game played at resorts to a
dangerous game before it became a skilled sport in later years. (In early years players were
sometime held underwater and the opposition goal keeper was allowed to stand on the edge of the
pool and may have dive bombed opposing players as they tried to score.) See: History of swimming section 1863.
Most pools will have a piece of rescue equipment hanging on the wall, a shepherd's crook.
see: How to rescue a drowning victim using a reaching assist or a shepherd's crook
A Doughboy or above ground pool is usually a metal frame with a plastic liner, anywhere from
a 12 foot round circle to a 21 by 41 foot oval. It is never safe to dive into an above ground pool.
Equipment commonly used by swimmers in practice at pools includes kick boards (a small
buoyant board mostly held by the hands to give support to the body so a swimmer can practice
their kick),
swim fins, hand paddles, (probably invented by Benjamin Franklin in 1716, see
History of swimming section) webbed gloves, and pull buoys (two small cylinders of stryrofoam
with a strap joining them, placed between the knees to give legs buoyancy so a swimmer can practice the pull only).
Kick boards can be dangerous used as toys. When a person tries to stand
on, kneel on or sit on a kickboard and loses control of it, it can come to the surface with enough
force to knock out teeth. Hand paddles and webbed gloves can cause shoulder problems if
overused. See also: pool toys
Vocabulary specific to De Anza:
EPOOL refers to the east end of the De Anza Olympic sized pool. This is the shallow end with water up to 5 feet deep. Novice swim classes, some beginning swim classes and water exercise classes are held there.
MPOOL is the middle section and WPOOL is the west end of the pool. Both are in water that is at least 6 to 7 feet deep.
DWELL is the diving well, the second pool at De Anza. It is 14 to 16 feet deep. It's where the lifeguard training class is held and where swim classes go to work on springboard diving.
This page has been linked to by various English as a Second Languge (ESL) instructors, including an upper level secondary school in France. Such use of the page is encouraged.
vocabulary to be able to understand workouts is at Swim workout vocabulary
Swim classes FAQs includes links to swimming, diving and triathlon rules.
The Navy Seal swim test, Naval Academy midshipmen's test, a prerequisite for an "Escape from Alcatraz" 1-1/2 mile ocean swim and others are at: How can I tell if I'm a good swimmer?
You can download (for free, no secret code required) or print the
American Red Cross Swimming and Water Safety Manual at: http://editiondigital.net/publication/?i=55928
(This had no index, so I wrote one: Swimming and Water Safety 2009 index).
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