Stalemate vs Chess - What's the difference?
stalemate | chess |
(chess) The state in which the player to move is not in check but has no legal moves, resulting in a draw.
Any situation that has no obvious possible movement, but does not involve any personal loss.
(chess) To bring about a state in which the player to move is not in check but has no legal moves.
(figuratively) To bring about a stalemate, in which no advance in an argument is achieved.
* 29 February 2012 , Aidan Foster-Carter, BBC News North Korea: The denuclearisation dance resumes [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-17213948]
A board game for two players with each beginning with sixteen chess pieces moving according to fixed rules across a chessboard with the objective to checkmate the opposing king.
A type of grass, generally considered a weed.
* 2007 , Michael Chabon, Gentlemen of the Road , Sceptre 2008, p. 59:
(military, chiefly, in the plural) One of the platforms, consisting of two or more planks dowelled together, for the flooring of a temporary military bridge.
* Farrow
As nouns the difference between stalemate and chess
is that stalemate is the state in which the player to move is not in check but has no legal moves, resulting in a draw while chess is a board game for two players with each beginning with sixteen chess pieces moving according to fixed rules across a chessboard with the objective to checkmate the opposing king.As a verb stalemate
is to bring about a state in which the player to move is not in check but has no legal moves.stalemate
English
Noun
(en noun)Verb
(stalemat)- The North Korean nuclear issue, stalemated for the past three years, is now back in play again - not before time.
See also
* checkAnagrams
*chess
English
(wikipedia chess)Etymology 1
From (etyl) .Noun
(en-noun)See also
(wikibooks chess) * * checkers * draughts * scacchicEtymology 2
Origin uncertain; perhaps linked to Etymology 1, above, from the sense of being arranged in rows or lines.Noun
(chesses)- Hobbled, loudly gourmandizing the dry chess grass, they were guarded by a pair of dismounted soldiers in long, dusty coats [...].
Etymology 3
Compare (etyl) .Noun
(es)- (Wilhelm)
- Each chess consists of three planks.