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See: Riichi



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Japanese English Explanation
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Terminology list

| | |' |- |anjun |concealed sequence |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. |- |ankan |concealed kan |Four self-drawn identical tiles set aside as a kantsu. Declaring an ankan does not open the hand if it was previously closed. |- |ankou |concealed triplet |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. |- |ari |in effect |States that the preceding rule is used, as in akadora ari for playing with red fives. Opposite of nashi. |- |minjun |open sequence |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. |- |nashi |invalid |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. |- |shuntsu |sequence |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. |- |}