No, Three of a kind can not beat a straight.
Well poker hands are [from the worst to the best]: 1- high card [no-pair] 2- one pair 3- two pair 4- three of a kind [trips, set] 5- straight 6- flush 7- full house [full boat] 8- four of a kind [quads] 9- straight flush 10- royal straight flush. So.. yes, it does. Royal flushes are the strongest hands in regular texas holdem.
Yes, in Texas Hold'em, a full house beats a straight.
In poker? Cause i play Texas Hold'em and a Straight does NOT beat a fullhouse, starting from highest to lowest: Royal Flush, Straight flush, four of a kind, full house, flush, straight, three of a kind, two pair, pair, high card.
No, in poker, a straight does not beat three of a kind. Three of a kind is a higher ranking hand than a straight.
No, a full house beats three of a kind in Texas Hold'em. A full house consists of three cards of one rank and two cards of another rank, while three of a kind consists of three cards of the same rank and two unrelated cards. Therefore, if two players have these hands, the player with the full house would win.
No, in poker, a three of a kind beats a straight.
No, in poker, three of a kind beats a straight.
Three aces in poker does not beat a small straight. A small straight beats three of a kind and two of a kind.
"Bad beat" is just a colloquial expression referring to having a very strong hand and losing to an unlikely, but possible, better hand. Such as if a player were to lose with four aces in holdem to a player with a straight flush. That means the bad beats have no formal place in any rules of procedure and are thus unlikely mentioned in any contest or casino rules (which I assume you meant instead of laws). For example the WSOP rules have no mention of a bad beat.
A straight can beat a high card, one pair, two pair, and three of a kind.
Yes, in poker, a straight beats a three of a kind.