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| {{relink|test this template}}
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| {{Main|Test this linkage}}
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| {{See|Riichi|Ippatsu|Tsumo}}
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| ==[[Template:Term list]]==
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| {{term list
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| |Romaji=Nippon
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| |Kanji=
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| |English=america
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| |Explanation=both
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| }}
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| <pre>{{term list
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| |Romaji=
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| |Kanji=
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| |English=
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| |Explanation=
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| }}</pre>
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| {| class="wikitable" width="100%"
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| !Japanese
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| !English
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| !Explanation
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| {{term list
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| |Japanese=Nippon
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| |English=america
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| |Explanation=both
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| }}
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| |}
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| ==Terminology list==
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| {| class="wikitable sortable" width="100%"
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| !Japanese
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| !Kanji
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| !English
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| !Explanation
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| |-
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| |anjun
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| |concealed sequence
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| |Three self-drawn consecutive tiles of the same suit, used as one of the four melds in a regular hand. An open sequence would be a ''minjun'', the general term for a sequence is ''shuntsu''.
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| |-
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| |ankan
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| |concealed kan
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| |Four self-drawn identical tiles set aside as a ''[[Kan|kantsu]]''. Declaring an ''ankan'' does not open the hand if it was previously closed.
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| |-
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| |ankou
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| |concealed triplet
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| |Three self-drawn identical tiles, used as one of the four melds in a regular hand. Compare with the yaku names ''[[san ankou]]'' and ''[[suu ankou]]''. An open triplet would be a ''minkou'', and the general term for any triplet is ''koutsu''.
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| |-
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| |ari
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| |in effect
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| |States that the preceding rule is used, as in ''akadora ari'' for playing with red fives. Opposite of ''nashi''.
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| |-
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| |minjun
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| |open sequence
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| |An open ''shuntsu'', i.e., a sequence of three consecutive tiles, formed by calling ''chii'' on the previously missing tile. A concealed ''shuntsu'' would be an ''anjun''.
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| |-
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| |nashi
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| |invalid
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| |States that the preceding rule is not in effect, as in ''kuikae nashi'' for disallowing players to call a tile and immediately discard another tile which would have also completed the called meld.
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| |-
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| |shuntsu
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| |sequence
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| |Three consecutive tiles of the same suit, used as one of the four melds in a regular hand. ''Chii'' is used to call a tile to complete a ''shuntsu'' and set it aside as a ''minjun'', i.e., an open ''shuntsu''. A concealed ''shuntsu'' is an ''anjun''.
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| |-
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| |}
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