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No, a pawn cannot capture a king in chess.
No, a pawn cannot capture a king in a game of chess.
No, a pawn cannot take out a king in a game of chess. The objective of chess is to checkmate the opponent's king, not to capture it with a pawn.
No, a pawn cannot eat a king in a game of chess. The objective of the game is to checkmate the opponent's king, not to capture it.
No, a pawn cannot take the king in chess.
The pawn can checkmate the king but only in conjunction with at least one other piece to protect the pawn from capture by the king and at least one enemy piece placed near the king so that it cuts off any escape avenues the king would have. If a pawn places a king in check and the king is completely surrounded by his own pieces in such a way that its only move would be capture the pawn and if no enemy piece is placed so that it can capture that pawn and if the pawn is protected from capture by one of its own pieces, the pawn has checkmated the king.
No, a pawn in chess cannot take a king. The game ends when the king is in checkmate, not captured by a pawn.
No, a pawn cannot take a king in a game of chess.
No, you cannot capture a king with a king in a game of chess.
Yes, a pawn may capture any piece on the board as long as it is a legal move. One way it could happen is the pawn is blocking lets say a Bishop or a Rook from attacking the opponent's king. The pawn moves to a square where it attacks the Queen. Normally the Queen would either just capture the pawn or move away from it. But if the move of the pawn now places the king in check from that Bishop or Rook (this is called a discovered check) the King must move out of check. If the player now in check has no alternative but to move the King out of check, then once he moves the king, the pawn is free to capture the Queen.
Yes, a pawn can take a rook in a game of chess if the rook is in a position where the pawn can capture it by moving diagonally forward.
No, you cannot capture a king with another king in a game of chess.