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.
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
Spanning Tree Election CriteriaSpanning Tree builds paths out from a central point along the fastest available links. It selects path according to the following criteria:1. Lowest root bridge ID (BID)2. Lowest path cost to the root3. Lowest sender bridge ID4. Lowest sender port ID (PID)Therefore, the answer to your question is Lower Bridge ID
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.
The white poker chip has the lowest value.
It depends on the game, but in Bridge it is Spades, Hearts, Diamonds, and Clubs in order from highest to lowest.
There are four suits in a deck of cards: Hearts, Diamonds, Clubs and Spades. In games that require "following suit," such as bridge or hearts, the strong suit in a players hand is the one that has the most and highest value cards. If a hand has many Spades of high value, for example, Spades would be its strong suit. By extension, a person's strong ( or long) suit is their area of expertise or ability, the things they do well. Most often used in the negative, as in "Being quiet in class is not his strong suit."
Seven (7) No Trump Doubled Redoubled