On her color. On e1 for white and e8 for black.
You could place the White Queen at A1 and the Black Queen at G8, they would not intersect with each other, there are many other valid positions too.
You cannot do this. The maximum possible is 5 queens and 5 knights without clashing. A solution to that would be:
Queens on a7, b2, c6, d3, e1
Knights on f8, g8, g5, g4, h5
32 in total 16 Pawns 4 Rooks 4 Knights 4 Bishops 2 Queens 2 Kings
yes
A fully set up chess board has, 2 Kings, 2 Queens, 4 Rooks, 4 Knights, 4 Bishops, and, 16 Pawns.
Since when a knight moves it changes the colour of its square, then placing all knights on the 32 white squares, means they can only jump to black squares where there are no knights present, so that's the answer.
How to place 12 knights on a chess board so that all squares
The hover board (hovercraft) runs on manure.
Knights for a Day - 1936 is rated/received certificates of: USA:Approved USA:Passed (National Board of Review)
Adventurous Knights - 1935 is rated/received certificates of: USA:Approved USA:Passed (National Board of Review)
You put them behind pawns..
Seeing as to how each side starts with two knights (horses) there are four knights at the start of the game. If a pawn is promoted to a knight there can be more than four knights on the board, but this doesn't usually happen.
There are more pawns on the board than any other since each player has 8 pawns. However, sometimes pawns are not referred to as "pieces." They are simply pawns while all the other combatants including the rooks, knights, bishops, king and queen are called pieces. In that regard, there is no "piece" that is more numerous than any other. There are 2 rooks, 2 knights and 2 bishops, so they are all equal in number.
No,any marker does come off poster board without destroying it.