Examples of using Second player in English and their translations into Hebrew
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
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Programming
Second player.
Let's be that second player.
Second player can always win.
Type the name of the second player.
The second player always wins.
Then how come it says"second player score"?
The second player gets the right most amount.
We will do this by showing a winning strategy for the second player.
Thus the second player will always win!
Which would mean there's a good chance the second player is trapped with Teal'c.
Then the second player gets to decide whether or not to accept.
The first player was to share money with the second player.
The second player, the“responder”, accepts or rejects the offer.
First player can force a win no matter what the second player does.
The second player(the responder) chooses to either accept or reject this proposal.
Once the first player makes it over, the second player will do the same and so on.
If the second player accepts the offer, they each get to keep whatever they have.
On 4×4 and 6×6 boards under perfect play, the second player wins.
A second player could join in and help you face the enemy.
Prove that for each opening move by the first player, the second player can always win.
If the second player accepts the offer, each player gets to keep their share.
The backgammon board consists of 24 triangles divided into four groups of six triangles each: two of the groups form the home board and outer board of one player, and the other 2 make the home board andthe outer board of the second player.
A second player can join in at any time and take control of Ryu's rival, Ken.
You know, it's if one player has offered something to a second player in exchange for something that the second player's just unable to relinquish.
A second player could drop in at anytime and challenge Ryu by controlling Ken, his rival.
First player is offered a hundred dollars and is asked to propose asplit: 50/50, 90/10, whatever that player wants to propose. The second player either accepts the split-- both players are paid and the game is over-- or rejects the split-- neither player is paid and the game is over.
The second player,“the responder”, simply receives the remainder of the endowment left by the proposer.
He became the second player in school history to record at least 25 points, 15 rebounds, and 5 blocks in a game.
The second player has two choices for the reply if the first player played in the center, otherwise five choices.