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9 answers

As the rest of the answers have made clear, the answer is castleing, castling, arghh. Something like that, I don't know how its spelled but it's pronounced kas-uhl-ing.
As to how it is done:
-If the king has not moved in the game before at all
-If the castle has not moved in the game at all
-If the king is not in check (You can't castle to get out of check..)
-If the spaces between a king and a castle are empty

Then you are allowed to castle:
C - - K
If there are two empty spaces between the king and castle, (shown in the crude illustration above) then you castle like this:
- K C -
That change occurs all in the same move.

If there are three spaces between the king and castle (this would be the castle on the other side):
K - - - C
And you castle the final placement looks like this:
- CK - -
That's castleing, no castling, ug. Whatever. That's kasuhling!

2007-08-27 05:32:57 · answer #1 · answered by thegrandgecko 2 · 0 0

That maneuver is termed castling. you are able to fort only as quickly as in the process the hobby, below here circumstances: There should not be any products between the King and Rook. Neither piece could have moved already. The King can't be in verify and can't flow over or land on a sq. this is attacked by using an opposing piece. To fort: flow the King 2 sq. in direction of the Rook and placed the Rook on the different area of the King (next sq.). on line, the Rook will flow right away. Castling places the King out of the midsection of the board, the place, usually speaking it truly is in extra danger than on the area of the board.

2016-12-12 10:41:36 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

It is called castling. If neither of the pieces have moved, and there are no pieces between them, the king may move 2 spaces over (toward the rook) and the rook takes the inside spot next to the king.

2007-08-23 11:17:10 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

It is called casteling. It is mostly used to put your King in a safer place. He can not be in danger when you castle. He can not castle across any danger. The rook is on the other side of him, once the move is made.
Good luck.

2007-08-23 11:24:55 · answer #4 · answered by dellet2 3 · 0 1

im not sure what the rule is but i know that its called castling. hope i could help you!

2007-08-23 11:20:54 · answer #5 · answered by Freedom 3 · 0 0

Castleing. you can look up the rules.

2007-08-23 11:17:52 · answer #6 · answered by Fordman 7 · 1 1

castling

2007-08-24 01:39:23 · answer #7 · answered by evrettbgo 5 · 0 0

castling

2007-08-23 18:02:57 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

They do not exactly trade places.

It is called castling.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castling

2007-08-25 01:02:44 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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