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swim

Swim is moving through water using limbs and breath. It can be recreational, competitive, lifesaving, or therapeutic and takes place in pools, rivers, lakes, oceans, and other water venues.

The four main competitive strokes are freestyle (front crawl), backstroke, breaststroke, and butterfly. An individual medley

Training emphasizes technique and conditioning. Swimming strengthens cardiovascular fitness, builds muscular endurance, and is relatively low

Safety and accessibility: learning to swim reduces drowning risk. Practices include lifeguards, designated swim areas, and

History and competition: Swimming has ancient roots and was part of early athletic contests. Modern competitive

combines
all
four.
Swimmers
coordinate
arm
movements,
kick
tempo,
and
breathing.
Common
gear
includes
swimsuits,
goggles,
and
swim
caps;
open-water
swimmers
may
wear
wetsuits
in
cold
conditions.
impact
on
joints.
Workouts
include
drills
to
fix
technique
and
interval
sets
to
develop
speed
and
endurance.
Beginners
often
start
with
guidance
and
flotation
aids
or
supervised
lessons.
certified
instruction.
Many
communities
offer
learn-to-swim
programs
and
adaptions
for
people
with
disabilities.
swimming
developed
in
the
19th
century;
men
competed
in
1896
Olympics,
with
women
joining
in
1912.
World
Aquatics
(formerly
FINA)
governs
the
sport
and
oversees
world
championships
and
records
in
pool
and
open-water
events.