Clubs. The rank order of suits from lowest to highest is Clubs, Diamonds, Hearts, Spades. This means that after 1 Club is bid, it is possible for 1 of any of the other suits to be bid. But if, say, 1 Heart is bid it is only possible to bid 1 Spade, 2 Clubs, 2 Diamonds, or some higher bid.
The lowest value suit is clubs. In bridge, the suits are divided into two groups: major suits (spades and hearts) and minor suits (diamonds and clubs). So, the result of ranking the suits in order of highest to lowest would be spades, hearts, diamonds, and then clubs.
If you mean the lowest card with a heart suit you can have, it would be a two.
The highest ranking suit in bridge is spades. 'No Trump' ranks higher than spades in the bidding, but it is not a suit.
A bridge hand with no cards in one suit is said to have a void.
David Burnstine has written: 'Five-suit bridge' -- subject(s): Five-suit bridge
clubs
Spades
In the card game Bridge, a convenient minor can be opened if you have one of a suit and 13 points or more, or 5 cards of a major suit (hearts or spades). A response is possible if your partner also has cards in the same suit.
It depends on the game, but in Bridge it is Spades, Hearts, Diamonds, and Clubs in order from highest to lowest.
Seven (7) No Trump Doubled Redoubled
minor suitminor suits
52 cards are used in a game of bridge. 2-10 plus jack, queen, king and ace in each suit. There are 13 cards in a suit and 4 suits.