un día en el carribe estudiantes seran capaces de jugar el juego popular de dominos

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Un día en el Carribe Estudiantes seran capaces de jugar el juego popular de Dominos

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Page 1: Un día en el Carribe Estudiantes seran capaces de jugar el juego popular de Dominos

Un día en el Carribe

Estudiantes seran capaces de jugar el juego popular de Dominos

Page 2: Un día en el Carribe Estudiantes seran capaces de jugar el juego popular de Dominos

Dominoes

Page 3: Un día en el Carribe Estudiantes seran capaces de jugar el juego popular de Dominos

El nombre de Domino

The word "domino" appears to have derived from the traditional appearance of the tiles - black dots on a white background - which is reminiscent of a "domino" (a kind of hood) worn by priests.

Page 4: Un día en el Carribe Estudiantes seran capaces de jugar el juego popular de Dominos

Historia del dominoes Dominoes evolved from dice. In fact, the

numbers in a standard double-six domino set represent all the rolls of two six-sided dice. A set of Chinese Dominoes contains all the possible combinations (including duplicates). European dominoes use only the unique rolls (and add in the blanks).

Dominoes are believed to have originated in China (see Chinese Dominoes) in the 12th century, though Egyptian or Arabian origins are also theorized. Dominoes appeared in Italy in the early eighteenth century, and spread to the rest of Europe throughout the remainder of the 1700's, becoming one of the most popular games in both family parlors and pubs alike.

Page 5: Un día en el Carribe Estudiantes seran capaces de jugar el juego popular de Dominos

Cortar los dominoes

Page 6: Un día en el Carribe Estudiantes seran capaces de jugar el juego popular de Dominos

How to play

Dominoes

Page 7: Un día en el Carribe Estudiantes seran capaces de jugar el juego popular de Dominos

How to play Step 1- Count that there are 28 dominoes, from

double blank to double six. Step 2- Place them facedown on the table and

shuffle them until they're random. Step 3- Allow your opponent to take seven

dominoes, and take seven for yourself. Step 4- Allow the player with the highest double to

go first. Step 5- Lay a domino with like value next to the first

domino (it doesn't matter which end). Make sure like values are always touching.

Step 6- Pick from the pile if you don't have a domino that corresponds to the ones on the layout. Keep those dominoes concealed from your opponent's).

Step 7- Pass if no more dominoes are left in the pile. Step 8- Win the session if you're the first person to

run out of dominoes. Step 9- End the session if everybody passes, in

which case the winner is the person with the lowest score.

Step 10- Count your score by the number of dots on the tiles remaining in your hand.

Page 8: Un día en el Carribe Estudiantes seran capaces de jugar el juego popular de Dominos

En Puerto Rico

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