No, unless if they made a false call.
In chess, a checkmate move is a move that one makes that puts the opponent in a position where the king piece has nowhere to move.
You can move your mum
you get them in check and they cant block, move, ortake the piece that is forcing you in check
You can't checkmate another king unless the king is the only piece left on the board.
The goal in chess, or the object of the game, is to checkmate your opponent's king. A king is in checkmate when he is attacked and no matter what move he attempts to make he is still being attacked (or in check). There are three ways to get out of check: move the king to a safe square, capture the checking piece, or block with another piece. If a player is in check and cannot get out of check, he is in checkmate and has lost the game.
You don't have to say either. No chess rule requires it, and it may be distracting to your opponent or those around you in a tournament. If you achieve checkmate, you should offer a handshake, or do whatever you normally do to conclude your games, but you do not have to say "checkmate."
Ron Weasley was on the knight and was attacked by the queen.
You don't take/kill a king in chess. You have to put it into checkmate, ie, there are no moves the opponent can make with any piece, to take the king out of check. When this happens, the game is over.
in Arabic checkmate is مات
A win. No matter how quick Black or White checkmates his opponent, it will always be a win. The quickest checkmate can be performed in 2 moves.
The rule that a pawn can not give checkmate probably stems from the rule that a piece may not be placed in a position from where it is unable to promote or continue. A pawn may only give checkmate by being placed directly in front of the emperor; a position from where it is unable to move or promote. It can not take the emperor piece as it could with other pieces, and it can not be promoted until it moves again. In Shogi, violating rules such as "Two pawns can not occupy the same column" or "a piece can not be placed in a position where it is unable to move or promote" results in an immediate loss for the one who violated the rule. Thus, by placing a pawn in this location, the player automatically loses the game by violation of a rule. The checkmate that the player gives doesn't matter because it was obtained through the rule's violation. In certain Shogi variations, such as yari shogi, a pawn can be used to give checkmate.