💡📝Charles Gilman wrote on Sat, Feb 19, 2011 07:08 AM UTC:
Now that the -marigold and -pollinator suffixes have gone, the next convention I'm looking to 'prune' is the Amb- prefix. It caters for alternating moves with a SOLL ratio of exactly 2, but other alternations need ad hoc creations. See the following pieces combining orthogonal and diagonal moves:
orthogonal moves
diagonal moves
Crooked alternator
Curved alternator
Wazir
Ferz
Rhino
Ambfinch
Dabbaba
Ferz
Alpaca
Ambapostle
Wazir
Elephant
Quagga
Yaffle
Trebuchet
Ferz
Okapi
-
Dabbaba
Elephant
Cashcow
Ambbadbaba
Wazir
Tripper
Springbok
-
Cobbler
Ferz
Qualpaca
-
Trebuchet
Elephant
Tragopan
-
Dabbaba
Tripper
Okalpaca
-
Cobbler
Elephant
Catbird
Ambflail
Dabbaba
Commuter
Zeshcow
-
Given that Leaping Bat Chess already uses one of the Curved pieces under the name of its Crooked counterpart I am inclined to drop the Amb- terminology and simply call 45° Curved pieces 'Curved Rhino', 'Curved Alpaca', et cetera. The Crooked-piece names are more memorable anyway - in reference to connections with the Knight, Camel, Zebra, Giraffe, Charolais, Antelope, Zemel, Satyr, Gimel, Crane, and Zherolais. Likewise for oblique 45° Curved pieces the names Ambrose, Ambmacel, Ambbezra, Ambrigaffe, et cetera would give way to Curved ...potamus, even though I don't have names even for Crooked alternators of other pairs of oblique leaps at 45°, such as Knight and Crane leaps.
This would not affect pieces alternating directions of the same simple piece. Firstly the Rose is well established and its name highly suits a Chess piece, and I have in turn embedded my Finch and Rabbi in Jewish-themed variants. Secondly they are genuinely more distinct from their nearest Crooked counterparts - at least in the case of the square-board Curved riders, which also alternate different angles.
This would not affect pieces alternating directions of the same simple piece. Firstly the Rose is well established and its name highly suits a Chess piece, and I have in turn embedded my Finch and Rabbi in Jewish-themed variants. Secondly they are genuinely more distinct from their nearest Crooked counterparts - at least in the case of the square-board Curved riders, which also alternate different angles.