In bridge, bidding and winning all the tricks is called a grand slam.
Historical note: A 1913 reference says a vole is "a deal at cards that draws all the tricks".
Doing Magic Tricks
they are for tricks and stunts as indicated on the name, they can also be used for grinding.
Proximity card a generic name for cards used for security access or payment systems. Also known as contactless smartcards.
When you activate this card, declare 1 card name. Cards with that name and their effects cannot be used. Cards on the field before this card was activated are not affected (including face-down cards).
No. Not unless the credit cards were stolen or used under a fake name. If the cards were used and received legally, the debt is just a debt.
Identity tags (or cards) were used in WWII to give an evacuee's name and age.
Yes, horses used for entertainment (like the circus) are taught simple tricks.
Barron Hilton used charge cards and the name charger struck him as appropriate for his AFL team.
My dogs used to learn to do tricks for treats! Dogs love attention, and learn quickly.
SLI technology
The Svengali Deck is a specially constructed deck of cards that can be used by magicians to perform various card tricks. The deck and the tricks performed with it are self-working and require almost no skill. Burling Hull claimed to have invented the deck in 1909. The deck alternates between normal cards and shortened cards, with the shortened cards all of the same number and suit. When the deck is riffled front to back, only the normal cards are visible; when it is riffled back to front, only the shortened cards are visible. The deck can be dribbled or riffled to create the illusion that the deck is completely ordinary. It can even be shuffled. One basic trick involves a spectator choosing a card from the deck and returning it; the card can then appear practically anywhere in the deck, making tricks like the Ambitious card incredibly simple. The final and most stunning trick is when all the cards are suddenly presented as being all the same as the initially chosen card. Joe Stuthard's Trilby and Bi-Co Trilby Decks are variations on this deck. In the 1960s and 1970s, Marshall Brodien sold 17 million Svengali decks under the name TV Magic Cards. While the Svengali Deck allows for the easy performance of seemingly complex tricks, the conjurer cannot allow an audience member to examine the deck. The use of a Svengali Deck can also be detected by its characteristic faster riffle and sound. Finally, because the deck is widely sold in joke and novelty shops, many laypeople are familiar with it.
Punch cards were used by computer programmers back when computers used punch cards. The cards were used to tell the computer what to do. Programmers had a machine that they used to write computer programs and it would punch the holes in the cards. It took a lot of cards just to write on program.