Yes 3 of a kind always beats two pair.
Yes
yes
Three kings and two nines is a full house, three aces is a three of a kind. A full house always beats a three of a kind.
Three aces and two eights is a full house. Three Aces and two nines would win. As would three aces and two kickers 10 or higher.
No, a full house beats two pair
Yes always. e.g. three sevens (777) beats a pair of kings and a pair of aces (KKAA)
The three sevens beat the three fives. You wouldn't even consider the rank of the pair in this case, since the three-of-a-kind takes precedence. The pairs are important, since they make the hands into full houses (if one king was missing, the five-ace full house would beat the seven trips), but you only compare the best set in this case.
Three aces in poker does not beat a small straight. A small straight beats three of a kind and two of a kind.
No.
Two pair works like this, the higher pair determines who is the winner. Suppose I have two pair Aces and fives, that means I beat all two pair that have kings as the higher pair, and queens etc. So Aces and fives beats Kings and queens. Now, if there is tie then the second pair comes in, so Aces and fives loses to Aces and sevens.
Depends what card game it is.
No. Three of a kind beats two pair in poker hands.
No not in cards