Lol.
Let's try this.
You are writing a book and on the book your character studies Wudang. You are writing a fight scene in which the character is attacked with a right hook.
Post a cool way of defending the hook and countering it in a Wudang manner.
Ok, fair enough. But it's still probably not a good way to look at it.
Different people who each trained in a different system, may very well use the exact same physical combination of movements, in defending against an attack. In the Chinese methods, the specific combination is not what differentiates one system from another. Rather, much of it lies in the underlying principles used in powering the techniques, and the specific training methodologies used to develop skill with those principles. The principles can drive any technique, any combination. So the combo may be the same, but you might, if you know what to look for, be able to identify a different way of moving, in subtle ways, within that same combination, that reflects the principles and methods of a particular system.
Now, some systems may have a certain technique that they favor, and it comes to be identified, to a degree, with that system. But overall, it is really difficult, if not impossible, to say that a system would "typically" respond to a punch in a certain manner, with a certain kind of combination.
If the principles could be understood and described within some fantasy writing, that could be interesting. But it would take more than a very casual passing familiarity with the system.
I'm not trying to beat down the project. I am trying to offer a legitimate education on the topic.