Excuse me, did the word "long martial arts" come from China ancient books or was it really invented by the Japanese?

The two times have similar meanings, both of which were used by the Japanese army during World War II.

Wu Yunjiu (ぶぅんちょぅきゅぅ)

(the earliest data found so far) = = ")

In the samurai era, boys over the age of five will have rituals.

This ceremony is to pray for long-term martial arts.

Open it first and see the literal meaning:

Wu Yun wins and loses. また, samurai? Soldiers are destined.

The fate of winning or losing in a battle. Or as a samurai? The fate of soldiers)

Long-term long-term. Forever. (For a long time. Forever. )

Five clouds for a long time.

アアけからぃのでのがくくこののがくくここ このののが 1 )

Pray that the soldiers on the battlefield will always be lucky. (This is the significance of the transformation of World War II)