Bureaucrats, checkuser, Administrators
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edits
(→A: Populated A) |
(→A: Missing kanji/kana) |
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{{term list | {{term list | ||
|Romaji=Anjun | |Romaji=Anjun | ||
|Kanji= | |Kanji=暗順 | ||
|English=Concealed sequence | |English=Concealed sequence | ||
|Explanation=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. | |Explanation=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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{{term list | {{term list | ||
|Romaji=Ankan | |Romaji=Ankan | ||
|Kanji= | |Kanji=暗槓 | ||
|English=Concealed kan | |English=Concealed kan | ||
|Explanation=Four self-drawn identical tiles set aside as a [[Kan|kantsu]]. Declaring an ankan does not open the hand if it was previously closed. | |Explanation=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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{{term list | {{term list | ||
|Romaji=Ankou | |Romaji=Ankou | ||
|Kanji= | |Kanji=暗刻 | ||
|English=Concealed triplet | |English=Concealed triplet | ||
|Explanation=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. | |Explanation=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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{{term list | {{term list | ||
|Romaji=[[Scoring|Aotenjou]] | |Romaji=[[Scoring|Aotenjou]] | ||
|Kanji= | |Kanji=青天井 | ||
|English=No capping | |English=No capping | ||
|Explanation=A rarely used rule, which eliminates the score cappings ''mangan'', ''haneman'', etc., and scores all hands as directly with the [[Scoring|scoring formula]]. | |Explanation=A rarely used rule, which eliminates the score cappings ''mangan'', ''haneman'', etc., and scores all hands as directly with the [[Scoring|scoring formula]]. | ||
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{{term list | {{term list | ||
|Romaji=Ari | |Romaji=Ari | ||
|Kanji= | |Kanji=アリ | ||
|English=In effect, on | |English=In effect, on | ||
|Explanation=States that the preceding rule is used, as in akadora ari for playing with red fives. Opposite of nashi. | |Explanation=States that the preceding rule is used, as in akadora ari for playing with red fives. Opposite of nashi. | ||
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{{term list | {{term list | ||
|Romaji=[[Atozuke]] | |Romaji=[[Atozuke]] | ||
|Kanji= | |Kanji=先付け | ||
|English=After-attach | |English=After-attach | ||
|Explanation=Allows a hand to win despite having no guaranteed yaku while in tenpai, as long as the winning tile generates a yaku. Opposite of ''sakizuke''. | |Explanation=Allows a hand to win despite having no guaranteed yaku while in tenpai, as long as the winning tile generates a yaku. Opposite of ''sakizuke''. |