No. A full house (888KK) always beats three of a kind (KKK).
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.
Yes always. e.g. three sevens (777) beats a pair of kings and a pair of aces (KKAA)
A King is a King and a 10 is a 10. The King's value of 10 is used in Blackjack not in poker. You cannot use a King in place of a 10 for a straight in poker.
A straight can beat a high card, one pair, two pair, and three of a kind.
The pair of queens beat the pair of tens, the nine and the ace are irrelevant. Queens are higher ranked than tens.
No, in poker, a three of a kind beats a two pair.
No, in poker, three of a kind beats two pair.
No, in poker, three of a kind beats two pair.
A three of a kind always beats a two pair.
Pair of eights
In a game of poker, full houses are ranked by the value of the three matching cards first, followed by the value of the pair. For example, a full house with three Kings and two Queens would beat a full house with three Queens and two Kings.
In poker, a hand is ranked primarily by its highest combination. A pair of aces and a pair of sixes (two pair) beats a pair of kings and a pair of tens (also two pair) because aces are the highest-ranking cards. Therefore, the hand with aces and sixes wins.