In a heart beat
Yes, a pawn can take a rook in a game of chess if the rook is in a position where the pawn can capture it by moving diagonally forward.
Yes, a rook can jump over a pawn in a game of chess.
A wrong rook pawn is a rook pawn within an endgame in chess which is unable to promote under the protection of a bishop, due to the promoting square being of the colour that the single friendly bishop cannot control.
Yes. If you make it to the other side of the board (last square) with a pawn, you can then trade it for a queen or any other piece that is captured. You can have as many queens as you want just flip a castle upside down or put a pawn on top of some other piece.
Pawn, Bishop, Rook, Knight, King and Queen.
Queen, Rook, Bishop, Knight, Pawn, King
Pawn, Knight, Bishop, Rook, Queen, and the King.
For example if you want to drop a pawn to check the king but not to mate him (you cannot mate with pawn drops).
It really depends on what you're asking. When in check, the only legal moves are moves that would serve to get you out of check. If capturing the rook with your pawn would mean your king was no longer in check, then yes, the rook may be taken. If capturing the rook with your pawn would mean that your king would be in check by another piece, then no, the rook may not be taken.
No, in a game of chess, a pawn cannot be promoted to another pawn. Pawns can only be promoted to a higher-ranking piece, such as a queen, rook, bishop, or knight.
The first move for the pawn can be either one or two spaces forward. Pawns attack diagonal only forward and when they get to the other side they can turn into a queen, rook, knight, or bishop.
No. There is no empress, just King, Queen, Rook, Bishop, Knight, Pawn.