Hi.
The text reads:
"Black...blew out the position of her opponent's king."
What does "blowing out" mean here?
I've no idea. Where did you read it?
Is this another of your chess questions where you're going to give us the context in post #3 instead of #1?
Rover
In your first post, you did not give us context. You gave us a title and a sentence and asked what two of the words meant.
The context is specifically that you read this in a book about chess.
Until Rover posted his question, I had absolutely no idea what it might be about. I was considering that perhaps a man called Mr Black was giving away information about the hidden location of the exiled king of a country, or something similar.
Either your thread should have been "blow out - chess terminology" or at least your question should have read "The text in my chess book reads ... "
Unfortunately, I cannot help with your actual question as I don't play chess. I think you need another chess player to answer, but now you know what kind of context we require in order to attempt to help.
I have played chess for 60 years and have never heard the expression you are asking about.
I still want to know where you read it.
Rover
If you have the analysis of the whole game, then you should have a pretty good idea of what the writer means here. You, a national chess coach, and Rover, a chess player for 60 years, do not know it as a technical term. Nobody else can know its meaning without full context. Even then, it might be an expression that nobody else has ever used in that context.
My own guess, and that's all it can be, is that it means something like 'destroy'.
Last edited by 5jj; 03-Dec-2011 at 21:02. Reason: typo
Context is always important; labelling is rarely important.