A number of new taggers appear at high challenge, that are really nothing
but new interpretations of existing calls. They are often so simple
that they are not actually used explicitly as calls, but are used as
ways of using the simple action with more complex tagging endings.
Remember that whenever any tagger is used in any kind of Reaction/Reactivate/Nuclear
Reaction context, it is always an <ATC>back Reaction. There is always
a trade in the middle. A caller might say "Track Reaction", but it always
means "Track Back Reaction".
Double Pass
This is incredibly simple. It takes the Mainstream call Double Pass Thru
and makes a tagger out of it. From a starting DPT, you are at the 0-tag
position. One would not say Double Pass the Tag 3/4, but might use
it in calls like Reflected Double Pass Chain Thru Reactivate.
\sxvlines{b3s,b4s,g4n,g1n}
\sxvlines{b3w,b4e,g4w,g1e}
before Double Pass Your Criss Cross Neighbor
after
Track
This is equally obvious.
\sxvlines{g4n,g1n,b3s,b4s}
\syhlines{b3s,b2n,g1s,g4n}
before Revert Track and Scatter Nuclear Reaction
after
Invert
Invert the Column 1/2, and you are at the 1/2 tag position. This can
be quite confusing, because Invert the Column and Invert the Tag both
take fractions, and those fractions have very similar meanings.
\syhlines{b4e,g4e,b1e,g1e}
\syhBBBs{g1w,...,b1w,b4e,g4w,...}
before Invert the Column 3/4
after
\syhlines{b4e,g4e,b1e,g1e}
\syhBBBs{...,g1w,b1w,b4e,...,g4e}
before Invert the Tag 3/4
after
Of course, the phrase "Invert the Tag" is almost never used, because
these special taggers are generally used only with interesting endings.
So "Invert 3/4" means "Invert the Column 3/4", while "Invert Chain Thru"
and "Invert Your Leader" refer to the tagger.
Pass and Roll
Think about Pass and Roll Your Neighbor. This is most commonly used
in the form Pass and Roll Your Cross Neighbor or Pass and Roll Your
Criss Cross Neighbor.
Extend
Some tagging endings naturally start from a 3/4 tag, and could start with
an extend from waves.