A pattern that is played, where the player must be the first to cover all four corners on their Bingo card in order to win.
A bingo pattern that involves covering the four corner numbers of the card in order to win.
A pattern where you must cover the corner numbers of the card. If you get those four numbers, you win.
A bingo pattern where your goal is to cover the four numbers found in the four corners of your bingo card.
Covering all four corners of yer card.
a type of pattern where the numbers in the corner of the card must be covered to win.
At this pattern, you must cover the corner numbers to win.
Four Corners is Australia's longest-running investigative journalism/current affairs television program. Produced by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) in Australia, it premiered in 1961 and is still running. Founding producer Robert Raymond (1961-62) and his successor Allan Ashbolt (1963) did much to set the ongoing tone of the program.
The Four Corners is the survey point at the intersection of the four U.S. states of Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona and the high desert plateau region surrounding that point in the southwestern United States. This is the only point in the United States where four states touch. Three of the four state corners are on the Navajo Indian Reservation.
The "Four Corners" point in Canada is a quadripoint at , where four political subdivisions meet. These are the provinces of Manitoba, and Saskatchewan and the territories of the Northwest Territories, and Nunavut. This became a "secondary quadripoint" (i.e. involving first-order subdivisions of a sovereign nation) with the creation of Nunavut on April 1, 1999.
Four Corners is a children's game, often played in elementary schools. The goal of the game is for players to choose corners of the room and not get caught by the designated "It" player until they are the last remaining participant.