Coup by the way
Coup en Passant, a maneuver passive in a bridge maneuver, which involves "stealing" the left-overs to an advantage lower than the one in the opponent's hand, for example:
The S player plays a spade contract and must take the last two left. Apparently it looks like he has two left losers (diamonds and spades) but if he plays his grandfather's head and then the hand is one of the losers, he will disappear - if a player on E races the club with a spike, then the king of playmaker will take the last left , and if you pass the tee, then the pitcher will pierce the lee.
The practical example of this game shows the hand 18 of the Correspondence Polish Championship 2005. The player E can complete the contract 4 ♠ playing on both sides, two penalties in the table and three in the hand, the last one thanks to en passant maneuver. In addition, the player takes two aces and a lady's heart, which is the access to the table for the purpose of the maneuver in question. (Previously, you should give the left to the king of hearts.) Bibliography
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