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yes. it also beats any "3 of a kind"
Trips is another way of saing three of a kind.
Set of integers.
A straight wins. The hand rankings are: Royal Flush (AKQJT of all the same suit) Straight Flush (a straight of all the same suit) 4 of a Kind (QQQQ for example) Full House (AAA44 for example) Flush (all same suit, non sequential) Straight (sequential but not same suit) 3 of a kind 2 pair 1 pair High Card
how is 1/3 of a set and 1/3 of a whole the same and different
A 'Set' in Piquet is 4 Cards or 3 Cards of the same Rank, ten or above (10, J, Q, K, A). 4 of a kind beats any 3 of a kind, and Higher rank beats lower rank, as in poker. Only the player with the best 'set' may score for sets in that hand. 3 of a kind scores 3 points 4 of a kind scores 14 points. Player who wins 'sets' may also score any other sets they may hold in that hand.
This is the list of the card ranks from the higher to the lowest: Royal Flush: this is the best possible hand in standard five-card Poker. Ace, King, Queen, Jack and 10, all of the same suit. Straight Flush: any five-card sequence in the same suit ( 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 of clubs; or 9, 10, J, Q and K of diamonds for example). Four of a Kind: all four cards of the same value ( 9, 9, 9, 9 for example). Full House: three of a kind combined with a pair (10, 10, 10 with 9, 9 for example). Flush: any five cards of the same suit, but not in sequence (2, 5, 9, 10 and King of clubs for example). Straight: five cards in sequence, but not in the same suit (6 of clubs, 7 of clubs, 8 of diamonds, 9 of spades and 10 of diamonds for example). Three of a Kind: three cards of the same value (3, 3, 3 for example). Two Pair: two separate pairs (3, 3, Queen, Queen for example). Pair Two cards of the same value (9, 9 for example). High Card: if a Poker hand contains none of the above combinations, it's valued by the highest card in it.
In order from best hand to worst: A royal flush (Ace-High straight of one suit) Straight Flush (A straight of one suit) Four-Of-A-Kind (Same rank) Full House (Three-of-a-kind and a pair) Flush ( Five of the same suit) Straight (Five cards in sequence. Ace can be high or low) Three-Of-A-Kind (Same rank) Two Pair (Two cards of same rank and another two of same rank) One Pair (Two cards of same rank) High Card (When none of the above is available your hand is based on your high card) In case more than one players holds the best hand, the one with the higher cards wins (for example, if both players have full house, one of them 3 Q's and 2 9'w and the other 3 9's and 2 K's - the first one wins)
Suit can refer to a set of clothes made of the same fabric and designed to be worn together. Suit can also mean a legal action or process brought to enforce a right or redress a wrong. Suit can be used to describe how well something fits or is appropriate for a particular purpose, such as "That job really suits him."
A full house does beat 5 of the same suit - called a flush - unless the 5 are in order, ie 5,6,7,8,9 in which it is a straight flush. If the 5 are the 10, J, Q, K, A then it is a royal flush and the highest possible hand that can be made without wild cards.
13 x 12 x 11 x 49 x 48 13 x 12 x 11 because there are 13 possible cards for any given suit, then 12 more of the same suit, then 11 more for the same suit. At this point, you have 49 cards left, then 48. So there are 4,036,032 possible hands like that.
That is a triplet.Playing a set of 3 notes during the same amount of time that a set of 2 notes would usually be played.