Elizabete Limanovska

Elizabete Limanovska (born 30 September 2000), is a Latvian chess Woman FIDE Master (2017). She is a winner the Latvian Women Chess Championship (2018).

Elizabete Limanovska
Country Latvia
Born (2000-09-30) 30 September 2000
TitleWoman FIDE Master

Biography

Seven times Elizabete Limanovska won in the Latvian Girl's Chess Championships in different age groups: in 2009 - U10, in 2012 - U12, in 2014 - U14, in 2015 and 2016 - U16, in 2017 and 2018 - U18.[1] She regularly participated of the European Youth Chess Championships (2010 — U10; 2014 — U14; 2016 — U16; 2017 — U18) and World Youth Chess Championships in different age groups (2011, 2012 — U12; 2015, 2016 — U16; 2017 — U18).

In April 2017, in Riga she participated in the Women's European Individual Chess Championship 2017.[2] At the end of July and the beginning of August of the same year, Elizabete Limanovska took part in the International Women chess tournament in Erfurt and fulfilled the FIDE master (WFM) norm.[3] Since 2011, she regularly took part in the Latvian Women's Chess Championships. In May 2018, she won the Latvian Women Chess Championship.[4][5]

Elizabete Limanovska played for Latvia in Chess Olympiads:

Elizabete Limanovska played for Latvia in the European Women's Team Chess Championships:

  • In 2019, at fourth board in the 22nd European Team Chess Championship (women) in Batumi (+1, =4, -1).[7]
gollark: Oh, and if you look at versions where it's "pull lever to divert trolley onto different people" versus "push person off bridge to stop trolley", people tend to be less willing to sacrifice one to save five in the second case, because they're more involved and/or it's less abstract somehow.
gollark: There might be studies on *that*, actually, you might be able to do it without particularly horrible ethical problems.
gollark: You don't know that. We can't really test this. Even people who support utilitarian philosophy abstractly might not want to pull the lever in a real visceral trolley problem.
gollark: Almost certainly mostly environment, yes.
gollark: It's easy to say that if you are just vaguely considering that, running it through the relatively unhurried processes of philosophizing™, that sort of thing. But probably less so if it's actually being turned over to emotion and such, because broadly speaking people reaaaallly don't want to die.

References

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