No not in cards
no
Depends on the value of the Ace and 5, Aces are used as the highest or lowest values in different games. if an ace has any positive value however, 2 aces and 2 fives would beat 1 ace and 2 fives.
52.. 4 Aces, queens, kings, jack, and 2-10 cards.
A pair of Aces & Deuces (Deuces = Two's) will win over a pair of Kings and Queens. A poker hand consist out of 5 cards. The highest card(s) win of course the hand. In this case I'm going to give you an example. Since there is no 5'th card I'll use X for it. A pair of Aces & Deuces will look like AA22X. In this case the highest pair (or valid combination of more then 2 cards) is the Aces. The pair of Kings & Queens looks like KKQQX. As you can see here, the highest pair (or valid combination of more then 2 cards) are the Kings. Because the Aces are of course higher then the Kings, the hand AA22X (or Aces and Deuces) win the hand.
Suit (club) does not matter unless you have a total of 5 same suited cards between your hand and the table. If you only have 2 clubs, you do not have a flush. Therefore, a pair of Aces does not beat a flush.
how do you star flying a plane in aces high 2 ? how do you star flying a plane in aces high 2 ?
3Q and 2 nines aka Queens full of Nines. Basically a full house is: 3 Cards + 2 cards. The full house rank is based upon the 3 cards; the higher the better. Lets give an example: AAA99 = Aces full of 9s 999AA = Nines full of Aces The aces full is better, and another example (If both players have Sixes full of X; then the X comes in to play; kind of like a kicker comes into play with pairs) 666QQ = Sixes full of Queens. 666KK = Sixes full of Kings. The 666KK hand would be better.
since the values of all cards are the same, the winner comes down to the amount of royalty, so 3 queens beats two jacks and 2 fives
No. The pair of kings is only one pair. No matter how low your 2 pair is (for instance fours & fives) it can't be beat by one pair.
i think its a pair but i have only recently started playing poker so im not sure
No. Three of a kind beats two pair in poker hands.
In a standard deck of 52 cards, there are 4 aces and 4 queens, so the probability of picking an ace or queen is 8 in 52, or 2 in 13, or about 0.1538.