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  1. Contract bridge, or simply bridge, is a trick-taking card game using a standard 52-card deck. In its basic format, it is played by four players in two competing partnerships, [1] with partners sitting opposite each other around a table.

  2. Brydż (ang. bridge) – logiczna gra karciana, w której bierze udział czterech graczy tworzących dwie rywalizujące ze sobą pary. Gracze stanowiący parę siedzą naprzeciwko siebie. Każda para stara się uzyskać lepszy wynik punktowy od wyniku przeciwników. Gra składa się z dwóch odrębnych części: licytacji oraz rozgrywki.

  3. It covers every aspect of bridge in all bridge-playing countries of the world; it contains complete and lucid definitions of every term; it describes and illustrates every standard bid, every recognized convention, and every type of play.

  4. Contract bridge. Declarer, near camera, plays dummy's hand as well as his own. Contract bridge, or just bridge, is a trick-taking card game. It is played by two pairs of players, one pair against the other pair. [1] Partners sit opposite each other at a table.

  5. news.bridgebase.com › 2024/11/14 › hand-of-the-day-204Hand of the day #204 - BBO News

    14 lis 2024 · Hand of the day #204. The Aces On Bridge by Bobby Wolff. Consider this awkward deal from a Cavendish Teams. North-South look destined to reach three no-trump, whether or not East pre-empts — unless they can stop off to double an overly aggressive pair who have gone overboard in diamonds. However, when West clears the diamonds at once, nine ...

  6. Computer bridge is the playing of the game contract bridge using computer software. After years of limited progress, since around the end of the 20th century the field of computer bridge has made major advances.

  7. The history of contract bridge may be dated from the early 16th-century invention of trick-taking games such as whist. Bridge departed from whist with the creation of Biritch (or "Russian Whist") in the 19th century, and evolved through the late 19th and early 20th centuries to form the present game.

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