e/Corresponding squares

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has glosseng: | align="right" | | | | |} Corresponding squares (also called relative squares, sister squares and coordinate squares ) in chess occur in some chess endgames, usually ones that are mostly blocked. If squares x and y are corresponding squares, it means that if one player moves to x then the other player must move to y in order to hold his position. Usually there are several pairs of these squares, and the members of each pair are labeled with the same number, e.g. 1, 2, etc. In some cases they indicate which square the defending king must move to in order to keep the opposing king away. In other cases, a maneuver by one king puts the other player in a situation where he cannot move to the corresponding square, thus the first king is able to penetrate the position . The theory of corresponding squares is more general than opposition, and is more useful in cluttered positions.
lexicalizationeng: corresponding squares
instance ofe/Chess endgame
Meaning
French
has glossfra: La case-clé (en allemand, Schlüsselfeld, en anglais, key square) est un concept du jeu d'échecs qui trouve son application dans les finales de pions en particulier.
lexicalizationfra: Case-cle
lexicalizationfra: case-clé
Interlingua (International Auxiliary Language Association)
has glossina: Quadratos correspondente es un position de chacos de quadratos de zugzwang reciproc (o mutual).
lexicalizationina: quadratos correspondente
Media
media:imgChess d45.svg
media:imgChess l45.svg
media:imgChess x1d45.svg
media:imgChess x1l45.svg

Query

Word: (case sensitive)
Language: (ISO 639-3 code, e.g. "eng" for English)


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