siteswap
English
editEtymology
editFrom site + swop. The term first appears in a Summer 1991 Juggler's World article, "A Notation for Juggling Tricks" by Bruce (Boppo) Tiemann and Bengt Magnusson:
- If the juggler is thought of as juggling imaginary sites where the balls could be, as he does these tricks, which ball lands in which site is different from trick to trick. For this reason, we call these tricks "site-swaps." The number of sites is equal to the word length, and may be different from the number of balls actually being juggled. [1]
Pronunciation
editNoun
editsiteswap (countable and uncountable, plural siteswaps)
- (uncountable) A numerical notation used to describe juggling patterns, where each number represents the height and direction of a throw.
- (countable) A specific notation for a pattern.
Usage notes
edit- The simplest form of siteswap (namely, one-person asynchronous siteswap where only one object is thrown from a hand at a time) is known as vanilla siteswap.
Synonyms
edit- (uncountable sense): siteswap notation