There are lots of great bridge websites out there. Rather than try to list them all, here is one website that has links to dozens of interesting sites....
World of Bridge
The link above can take you to teaching websites for all levels of play, sites where you can play against humans and robots, video clips of interviews with famous players, and much much more.
And the single best teaching/learning bridge site I know of is Richard Pavlicek's If you are just starting out, try the "Bridge Basics" link; for intermediate and above, use the "Advanced Lessons" link. One or two of Pavlicek's ideas are non-standard, but there is so much useful stuff there: lessons, examples, and exercises (quizzes) on bidding, declarer play and defensive play.
For total beginners, who are prepared to do independent study and who would like to play hands on a computer, here is an excellent site: vubridge.com/Minibridge.aspx From this page you can access a 45 page manual (How to play Minibridge) as well as 88 different bridge hands (11 lessons, each with 8 hands on a single theme).
World of Bridge
The link above can take you to teaching websites for all levels of play, sites where you can play against humans and robots, video clips of interviews with famous players, and much much more.
And the single best teaching/learning bridge site I know of is Richard Pavlicek's If you are just starting out, try the "Bridge Basics" link; for intermediate and above, use the "Advanced Lessons" link. One or two of Pavlicek's ideas are non-standard, but there is so much useful stuff there: lessons, examples, and exercises (quizzes) on bidding, declarer play and defensive play.
For total beginners, who are prepared to do independent study and who would like to play hands on a computer, here is an excellent site: vubridge.com/Minibridge.aspx From this page you can access a 45 page manual (How to play Minibridge) as well as 88 different bridge hands (11 lessons, each with 8 hands on a single theme).