Cyberyeti, on 2012-September-19, 05:22, said:
Another one I came across (never having played 3rd/5th leads in my life) was a player leading 4th from Q108x which her partner implied was normal because "you can't spare the 8". Is this normal and should a caveat be put on the explanation of 3rd/5th if it's not ?
I think it is completely normal. Most 3rd and 5th or 3rd and lowest pairs will not lead a 3rd card that they feel will give a trick. It is similar to playing high-low to show an even number - would you peter with Qx? Jx? Tx? But I do not think you put on your card "Even = hi-low unless we cannot afford it".
Cyberyeti, on 2012-September-19, 05:22, said:
I had this conversation several times:
Me: What system do you play ?
Opp: standard
Me: Where are you from ?
Opp: Poland/France/Holland/Romania/Hungary/Italy
Standard meaning several different things depending on where they were from.
More than separate countries, I get a very strong impression that standard in the greater London area is nowhere near the same as in most of the rest of England.
gnasher, on 2012-September-20, 05:03, said:
And I think having one opponent translate for the other is absolutely fine.
At Lille I served on a WBF AC where one pair spoke no English. One of their opponents translated for them so it worked out alright!
Vampyr, on 2012-September-20, 06:59, said:
This is pretty unfair. Lots of English and American people can speak a foreign language or two, but this will not help in most situations. We might be able to speak French, Japanese and Russian, and this will be useful against a few pairs in a place like Pula; still we will have a problem communicating with all of the other pairs.
No, it is perfectly fair: you were not brought up in England. When people of my age were taught foreign languages in school, the teaching was dreadful and based on such wonders as learning lists of vocabulary but never speaking the language. It is normal for English people to have learnt one to three languages at school and to be totally unable to speak them.