Examples of using Black will in English and their translations into Serbian
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
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Latin
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Cyrillic
Black will be overwhelming.
Castle Black will stand!
Black will often castle queenside.
One day, a black will be president.
Black will be the color of a tryst.
But goin' to war with Black will be a big mistake.
Black will again be black.
Once this ink starts to fade, the black will really help it pop.
Black will always be black. .
And not a Superman nor a Manchester Black will stop us from defending our borders.
The black will generally stay black. .
Red on white background will appear dark, and the black will radiate heat.
What is black will become blacker!
White maintains flexibility by not committing to a particular central pawn structure,while waiting to see what Black will do.
And the black will always remain black. .
Again, White can inflict doubled pawns,and again Black will try to make use of his bishop pair.
Black will give the surprising bewitching effect.
White will try to exploit an advantage in space and development, while Black will defend the position and aim for queenside counterplay.
In this case, Black will try to maintain his knight on e4, or at least get a concession before retreating it.
White will try to use his advantage in space to attack, whereas Black will try to keep White at bay while striking back at the centre.
Black will be fine, thanks,” he answered, taking in a deep whiff of the fresh brew, while also taking in a view of Wanda's huge chest.
If Black moves his e-pawn, White can play Bxf8, after which Black will have to waste time on artificial castling after recapturing with his king.
If White does so, Black will try to show that his pair of bishops is valuable, and that White has wasted time by moving his bishop twice in order to trade it off.
The light color will perform the function of visual enhancement of contrast, and black will focus on the finishing of the floor and break the monotony of the monochromatic coating.
When White plays Nc3, Black will trade his bishop for it in order to keep control over d5 and e4, and will break on the queenside with moves like…a4 and…b5.
In this situation,White will try to exploit the passivity of Black's light-squared bishop, and Black will try to release it, trade it, or prove that, while passive, the bishop has a useful defensive role.
When White plays Nc3, Black will exchange bishop for knight in order to enhance his control over the central light squares, and play on the queenside with moves such as… a5- a4 and… b5.
White will regain his piece with interest,emerging with an extra pawn, but Black will soon complete his development, gaining great dynamic compensation, whereas White's task is rather more difficult.
After the capture Black will generally place pressure on the c5-square and will develop an attack against White's weak queenside structure at the cost of an inferior central position.
The middlegames arising from this line are characterised by much manoeuvring;in most lines, Black will look to break with… b7- b5 or… f7- f5 after due preparation, while White may play Nc3- e4- h3- Bd3- Nf3- g4, in order to gain space on the kingside and prevent… f5.[3].
