Yes you can.
No, this allows your opponent to take your king, ending the game before your rook could retaliate.
Your pawn can promote to a Knight, Bishop, Rook or Queen. You CANNOT promote into a new King, however.
Front row: pawns Back row: rook, knight, bishop, queen, king, bishop, knight, and rook
If a player still has a pawn, this pawn can be promoted to a greater piece (Queen, Bishop, Rook, or Knight -- usually the Queen is chosen) and, if the queen or rook is chosen, this means a win for the player starting with the pawn. Stalemate only occurs if the pawn is captured by the opponent before it can be promoted. Also, if a player is left with only a king and knight, or only a king and bishop, and the opponent only has a king, or a king with either (a bishop or knight), in these situations, it is impossible to bring the opponent to checkmate. Only with the king and a rook or (obviously) with the king and a queen, can checkmate be accomplished.
Queen, Rook, Bishop, Knight, Pawn, King
Pawn, Bishop, Rook, Knight, King and Queen.
rook king queen pon knight bishop
Pawn, Knight, Bishop, Rook, Queen, and the King.
For White at the start of the game: a1 = rook b1 = knight c1 = bishop d1 = queen e1 = king f1 = bishop g1 = knight h1 = rook a2 - h2 = 8 pawns For Black at the start of the game: a8 = rook b8 = knight c8 = bishop d8 = queen e8 = king f8 = bishop g8 = knight h8 = rook a7-h7 = 8 pawns
No. There is no empress, just King, Queen, Rook, Bishop, Knight, Pawn.
The King, The Queen, Bishop, Pawn, Knight, and Rooks. =)
It is a riddle; the correct move is (the white rook) Rc6, blocking the white bishop's pin on the black rook.