lamford, on 2015-March-26, 10:05, said:
It would be easy if you read the Blue Book, but you seem to have a pathological dislike of the EBU regulations causing you to generate inane observations on this and similar threads. The Blue Book has, under the definition of "natural" for Pass, and therefore not alertable:
[4C1] (c) A pass which does not unexpectedly convey values or specify suit holdings.
On a linguistic note, it would be clearer if this regulation said:
[4C1] (c) A pass which does not specify suit holdings or unexpectedly convey values.
As written it is ambiguous and the second version above might not be the correct interpretation.
The fact that it specified a suit holding (precisely two spades) means that it was not natural, and therefore was alertable.
lamford, on 2015-March-26, 10:49, said:
Not so. The unexpectedly refers to "convey values". If a pass specifies a suit length it is always alertable.
OK, so it appears that Vampyr is mistaken when she is interpreting this 'simple' rule.
Vampyr, on 2015-March-25, 11:44, said:
The EBU don't recognise the concept of "self-alerting bids".
It seems to me that BB4C1( c) implies that a pass here is alerted, since it conveys a message about suit holdings. In any case, it is, in my experience, always alerted, so this is what the opponents will expect, even if it is incorrect!
A non-alerted meaning, trevahound, would show some willingness to play in 2♥X.
If the pass showed willingness to play in 2
♥x, then it would specify suit holdings (in hearts) and would therefore be alertable.