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WordNet
chess game

n. a game for two players who move their 16 pieces according to specific rules; the object is to checkmate the opponent's king [syn: chess]

Wikipedia
Chess Game

Chess Game is a 2014 Brazilian thriller film written and directed by Luis Antonio Pereira.

The film follows the story of a woman who is sentenced to prison because of a social security fraud involving a senator. The senator fears that she can tell the truth to the authorities, so he bribes the prison warden to prevent her from telling the truth.

Usage examples of "chess game".

A reader who chanced to be ignorant of the Glass Bead Game might imagine such a Game pattern as rather similar to the pattern of a chess game, except that the significances of the pieces and the potentialities of their relationships to one another and their effect upon one another multiplied manyfold and an actual content must be ascribed to each piece, each constellation, each chess move, of which this move, configuration, and so on is the symbol.

Each of the mental attacks had been choreographed much like a chess game.

I'm going to play a big chess game tomorrow, and you know how much it means to me and my self respect, and you don't care.

And so ends the story of the greatest chess game for the highest stakes ever to be played in our valley.

This coming Saturday would be exactly six months since Felix' ill-fated first chess game.

Just then Hanuman finished his chess game, and he tipped over the salt shaker in token of defeat.

At the last moment, thanks to the death of one crewman and the message of another via the chess game, he had reversed himself.

He heard the pause in the speed chess game and knew that Lou Giamarino was looking over the board.

The lost part obviously describes the issue of the chess game or games, and the penalties demanded by Bochaid: what these penalties were is plain from the succeeding story.

They were well acquainted, these two, an acquaintance which had begun with the chess game incident which had given to the noted scientist the soubriquet by which he had since become known beyond the narrow pale of science.