Friday, June 09, 2006

Chess Terminology (K)

Chess Terms Starting With "K"

Key square:

(1)An important square;

(2) (Pawn endings) A square whose occupation by one side's king guarantees the achievement of a certain goal, such as the win of a pawn.

Kibitz: As a spectator, making comments on a chess game that can be heard by the players. Kibitzing on serious games is considered bad manners.

Kick: Attacking a piece, typically by a pawn, so that it will move.

King: The king is the most important piece in the game of chess. The king represents the prize the opposition seeks to win. If a player's king is threatened and cannot escape capture, the king is said to be in checkmate, and the player which owns that king loses the game. In a conventional game of chess, White starts with the king in the middle-right of their first rank (between the queen and the king-side bishop). Black starts with the king directly across from the white king. In algebraic notation, the white king starts on e1 and the black king on e8.

King Bishop: The bishop that was on the king-side at the start of the game. The terms King Knight and King Rook are also used.

Kingside: The side of the board where the kings are at the start of the game, as opposed to the queenside.

Knight: The knight (or colloquially, horse) is a piece in the game of chess, representing a knight (armoured cavalry) and often depicted as a horse's head. Each player starts with two knights on their first rank. In algebraic notation the white knights start on b1 and g1, while the black knights start on b8 and g8.

Copyright 2006 Chess Strategies Blog

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