No; in Chess, once you have touched a piece, you must move it. The only exception to this rule is in the case of adjusting the piece within its square. Some people play by the "the move is complete when you let go of the piece" rule, but this isn't an official rule. Officially, you touch it, it must move.
Once you've moved it, you can only move it back if doing so constitutes a legal move for that piece and the current position, and only as a separate turn. In short, there are no "take-backs".
A bad move in chess is called a "blunder".
You can not skip your move in chess. You always have to move when it is your turn. If you have no legal moves in chess and it is your turn, the game is a stalemate.
No.
This is not a legal chess move in keeping with the rules of chess . You may be thinking of Castling ~ see related link below .
The Bishop's Move, a chess move where a bishop is moved to a different square, has been a part of chess since the game's early development. It is one of the original moves in chess and has been played for centuries.
No. Castling counts as a move.
A turn in chess is known as a "Move" ~ see related link below for a list of chess terms .
A chess piece which can move in an "L" formation that is on the black team.
A bishop in Chess can move diagonally in any direction as the path is not obstructed by another piece.
You can move your mum
Yes , there are no rules in the game of chess prohibiting the duplication of a move by an opponent .
no there is not.