TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE
OF THE (ACBL) LAWS
by Morris Jones and Gary Porter
Answer each of these 25 questions True or False.
Then Click Here for The Answers
- After making an insufficient bid, the first option
is for the offending player to correct the bid to a sufficient bid
in the same denomination (suit or notrump) with no penalty.
- If your opponent passes after a hesitation, you
may take any inference you like, at your risk.
- If RHO is the dealer, and you pass before he
makes his first call, your partner will be barred from the auction.
- It is illegal to "psyche" a strong artificial
2 Club opening bid.
- Opening 1 bids of less than 8 high-card points,
by partnership agreement, are illegal.
- "Psyche" bids are perfectly legal and should
not be called to the attention of the director.
- By law, the opening lead must be made face down.
- When shuffling and dealing, it doesn't matter
how you deal, so long as each player gets 13 cards.
- When the dummy is faced, it is too late for
any player to ask for a review of the bidding.
- During the play, declarer or either defender
may ask for an explanation of an opponent's bid.
- During the play, dummy may not look at an opponent's
convention card.
- During the play, it is improper for declarer
to ask what the contract is.
- The auction proceeds 2NT - Pass - 2 Clubs (Insufficient).
The director should allow opener's partner to correct his bid to 3
Clubs without penalty, unless the 2 Club bid is accepted.
- As a defender, I should call attention to my
partner's failure to alert my alertable bid before he makes the opening
lead.
- Until a card is led to the next trick, declarer
or either defender may inspect, but not expose, his own last card
played.
- If dummy notices that declarer has a quitted
trick turned wrong, he should call it to his attention as soon as
possible.
- When any player at the table notices an irregularity
during the play, he should call the director immediately.
- Dummy is allowed to attempt to prevent an irregularity
by declarer.
- If declarer leads from the wrong hand, the lead
must be corrected unless either defender accepts.
- By law, you must count the cards in your hand
before examining them.
- By law, you must count the cards in your hand
before putting them away.
- A defender's card is considered "played" when
held in a position such that his partner could see it.
- If a defender accidentally drops a small card
face up, it is a minor penalty card.
- If a player revokes to a trick, it is a two-trick
penalty.
- After declarer claims the remaining tricks,
if a defender disagrees with the claim, he should ask declarer to
continue playing.
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