From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishcalisthenicscal‧is‧then‧ics /ˌkæləsˈθenɪks/ noun [uncountable] DSOthe American spelling of callisthenics
Examples from the Corpus
calisthenics• Patients did calisthenics, practiced with their wheelchairs and crutches, walked, swam, and received massages.• I will do five minutes of calisthenics daily. 4.• By the time she was 35, she was teaching two aerobics classes and four half-hour sessions of calisthenics a day.• I believe helping others is one of the most positive, salubrious forms of social calisthenics.Origin calisthenics (1800-1900) Greek kallos “beauty” + sthenos “strength”