Yes
Queen A pawn is at the back
chess pawns
Yes , the promoted pawn may be captured at any time .
if when you say force over you mean attack and take , then yes but can only attack from the front, back ,sides ,and the diagonals not facing forward
the pawn, of course!! (tho i still like the queen, lol)
It means that you have broken a bone or a part in someones back.
Front row: pawns Back row: rook, knight, bishop, queen, king, bishop, knight, and rook
you get one of your pawns to the other side of the board. then, you can take what ever piece you lost in the beginning. (besides a nother pawn)
Any piece may attack any other opponent's piece using its standard move. In addition, you can choose to attack using En Passant if you have an adjacent pawn and the opponent moves a pawn 2 spaces on its first move.
INDIANS discovered the game CHESS before a long back centuries......
Learn the chess rules at this website. http://www.expert-chess-strategies.com
In chess, when a pawn has crossed the board and reaches the last rank, that pawn is promoted. In promotion, the promoting player can claim any piece he wishes. It doesn't matter what he has or doesn't have on the board at the time. This sets the stage for more than one queen or more than two rooks, two bishops or two knights of the same color to be on the board at one time. If you had lost your queen previously, then you can "get your queen back" as asked. It is unusual for a player promoting a pawn to claim anything but a queen. The queen can do anything a rook or bishop can do, and might actually be said to "combine" the moves of both pieces. But there are rare cases where is it of benefit to ask for a knight, as this piece cannot be blocked when it attacks. In what is called under-promotion, the player might elect to take something other than the queen. Such a tactic might allow a player to increase his ability to attack without creating a stalemate because of a positional situation. As stated, the player promoting a pawn has choice of pieces, and must select either queen, rook, bishop or knight.