Examples of using "Mat'" in a sentence and their english translations:
- Checkmate!
- Checkmate.
- Checkmate!
- Checkmate.
can I get away with being "medium skin toned,"
- Tom looked at me triumphantly and said, "Check and mate."
- Tom looked at me triumphantly and said, "Checkmate."
I went to bed at 5 o'clock in the morning.
can have extensions, must be medium to light skin toned."
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".
Only the king cannot be captured. The imprisonment of a king, that is, checkmate, means the end of the game.
Etymologically, checkmate means "the king is dead". However, the king has not "died" in the game of chess for a long time. In fact, the king is the only piece that cannot even be captured, although checkmate finishes the game and, strictly speaking, can be considered as a "death" for the king.
"How did you like that, dear friend," said Tom with a smile, "this checkmate that I gave you with my queen?" - Mary was shocked at first. Would she have missed something? But she soon smiled too and replied, "Well, what would you think if I captured your queen with my knight?" And having moved the knight, she removed the queen from the board.
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.