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Pray As You Go is a daily prayer website, podcast and application that was created in 2006 by the Jesuits in the United Kingdom. [1] Since its founding it has been adapted into nine other languages and as of 2020, it is used 30 million times a year.
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Kiai (気合い) translates as 'fighting spirit', meaning play that is aggressive or where the player takes the initiative. Kiai typically means keeping sente and not letting the opponent have his or her way. A sensei might say, "You play too passively — put some kiai in your moves!” Kiai moves can surprise an opponent and turn the game around.
A reverse sente play is a gote play that prevents the opponent from making a sente move. When a player ignores an opponent's sente move and plays elsewhere, they are said to play tenuki . Playing tenuki is as a kind of gambit where the player accepts a potential loss on the local level in order seize the initiative by playing elsewhere.
Rule 8. A play is illegal if it would have the effect (after all steps of the play have been completed) of creating a position that has occurred previously in the game. Though a pass is a kind of "move", it is not a "play". Therefore, Rule 8 never bars a player from passing. One consequence of Rule 8 is the so-called ko rule: Consequence (ko rule).
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Small boards are often used for novice players (double-digit kyu players) just learning to play Go, or for quick games. As the fewer moves made when playing on smaller boards gives White fewer chances to overcome the advantage conferred by the handicap, smaller handicaps are used on smaller Go boards (most commonly 13×13 and 9×9).