Pronunciation of the English word pawn.
# | Sentence | |
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1. | If White has a pawn on e5 and Black plays his pawn from d7 to d5, the white pawn can take the black pawn, removing it from the board and occupying d6, as if the black pawn were there. This is called taking "en passant". | |
2. | If White has a pawn at e5 and Black plays his pawn from d7 to d6, the white pawn can take the black pawn, removing it from the board and occupying d6. | |
3. | White pawn to f3, black pawn to e6, white pawn to g4, black queen to h4 - checkmate! This is jokingly referred to in chess circles as "fool's mate". | |
4. | White: rook on a1, pawn on b6, king on c8. Black: pawns on a7 and b7, king on a8, bishop on b8. White puts the opponent in zugzwang by playing the rook to a6, after which Black has only two options: take the rook on a6 or move his bishop to any other square on the diagonal b8-h2. In the first case, White advances his pawn from b6 to b7 and checkmates. In the second situation, the white rook takes the black pawn on a7, with the same result. | |
5. | Pawn pawned by pawn. | |
6. | The white pawn took the black pawn "en passant". | |
7. | A person who is only a pawn in the game often talks big in company. | |
8. | A clerk in the office is only a pawn in the game of big business. | |
9. | The infantry soldier is only a pawn in the game of war. | |
10. | I tilt my head. Not the pawn, but the knight? |